20 research outputs found
Solder Characterization on Ancient Gold Artifacts with the Electron Microprobe
The Laboratoire de Recherche des Musees de France has tested the applicability of the scanning electron microscope with X-ray analysis facilities in the study of ancient gold artifacts and particularly the joining processes. Three types of joining methods are known to have been used in Ancient Times : sintering, brazing with Au-Ag-Cu alloys and copper-salt binding. X-ray distribution maps of selected elements on very small areas show clearly the different processes used in the manufacture of Oriental and Iron-Age artifacts
Recruitment of the mitotic exit network to yeast centrosomes couples septin displacement to actomyosin constriction
The Mitotic Exit Network (MEN) promotes mitotic exit and cytokinesis but if and how MEN independently controls these two processes is unclear. Here, the authors report that MEN displaces septins from the cell division site to promote actomyosin ring constriction, independently of MEN control of mitotic exit
LEAD ISOTOPE DATA FROM THE ISOTRACE LABORATORY, OXFORD: ARCHAEOMETRY DATA BASE 5, ORES FROM BULGARIA
THE LATE BRONZE AGE HOARD FROM CLOS DE LA BLANCHE PIERRE, ST LAWRENCE, JERSEY, CHANNEL ISLES.
A pressure test to make 10 molecules in 90 days: external evaluation of methods to engineer biology
Centralized facilities for genetic engineering, or “biofoundries”, offer the potential to design organisms to address emerging needs in medicine, agriculture, industry, and defense. The field has seen rapid advances in technology, but it is difficult to gauge current capabilities or identify gaps across projects. To this end, our foundry was assessed via a timed “pressure test”, in which 3 months were given to build organisms to produce 10 molecules unknown to us in advance. By applying a diversity of new approaches, we produced the desired molecule or a closely related one for six out of 10 targets during the performance period and made advances toward production of the others as well. Specifically, we increased the titers of 1-hexadecanol, pyrrolnitrin, and pacidamycin D, found novel routes to the enediyne warhead underlying powerful antimicrobials, established a cellfree system for monoterpene production, produced an intermediate toward vincristine biosynthesis, and encoded 7802 individually retrievable pathways to 540 bisindoles in a DNA pool. Pathways to tetrahydrofuran and barbamide were designed and constructed, but toxicity or analytical tools inhibited further progress. In sum, we constructed 1.2 Mb DNA, built 215 strains spanning five species (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Escherichia coli, Streptomyces albidof lavus, Streptomyces coelicolor, and Streptomyces albovinaceus), established two cell-free systems, and performed 690 assays developed in-house for the molecules
Organism Engineering for the Bioproduction of the Triaminotrinitrobenzene (TATB) Precursor Phloroglucinol (PG)
Organism engineering requires the selection of an appropriate
chassis,
editing its genome, combining traits from different source species,
and controlling genes with synthetic circuits. When a strain is needed
for a new target objective, for example, to produce a chemical-of-need,
the best strains, genes, techniques, software, and expertise may be
distributed across laboratories. Here, we report a project where we
were assigned phloroglucinol (PG) as a target, and then combined unique
capabilities across the United States Army, Navy, and Air Force service
laboratories with the shared goal of designing an organism to produce
this molecule. In addition to the laboratory strain Escherichia
coli, organisms were screened from soil and seawater. Putative
PG-producing enzymes were mined from a strain bank of bacteria isolated
from aircraft and fuel depots. The best enzyme was introduced into
the ocean strain Marinobacter atlanticus CP1 with
its genome edited to redirect carbon flux from natural fatty acid
ester (FAE) production. PG production was also attempted in Bacillus subtilis and Clostridium acetobutylicum. A genetic circuit was constructed in E. coli that responds to PG accumulation, which was then ported to an in vitro paper-based system that could serve as a platform
for future low-cost strain screening or for in-field sensing. Collectively,
these efforts show how distributed biotechnology laboratories with
domain-specific expertise can be marshalled to quickly provide a solution
for a targeted organism engineering project, and highlights data and
material sharing protocols needed to accelerate future efforts
Organism Engineering for the Bioproduction of the Triaminotrinitrobenzene (TATB) Precursor Phloroglucinol (PG)
A pressure test to make 10 molecules in 90 days: External evaluation of methods to engineer biology
© 2018 American Chemical Society. Centralized facilities for genetic engineering, or "biofoundries", offer the potential to design organisms to address emerging needs in medicine, agriculture, industry, and defense. The field has seen rapid advances in technology, but it is difficult to gauge current capabilities or identify gaps across projects. To this end, our foundry was assessed via a timed "pressure test", in which 3 months were given to build organisms to produce 10 molecules unknown to us in advance. By applying a diversity of new approaches, we produced the desired molecule or a closely related one for six out of 10 targets during the performance period and made advances toward production of the others as well. Specifically, we increased the titers of 1-hexadecanol, pyrrolnitrin, and pacidamycin D, found novel routes to the enediyne warhead underlying powerful antimicrobials, established a cell-free system for monoterpene production, produced an intermediate toward vincristine biosynthesis, and encoded 7802 individually retrievable pathways to 540 bisindoles in a DNA pool. Pathways to tetrahydrofuran and barbamide were designed and constructed, but toxicity or analytical tools inhibited further progress. In sum, we constructed 1.2 Mb DNA, built 215 strains spanning five species (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Escherichia coli, Streptomyces albidoflavus, Streptomyces coelicolor, and Streptomyces albovinaceus), established two cell-free systems, and performed 690 assays developed in-house for the molecules
A Pressure Test to Make 10 Molecules in 90 Days: External Evaluation of Methods to Engineer Biology
Centralized
facilities for genetic engineering, or “biofoundries”,
offer the potential to design organisms to address emerging needs
in medicine, agriculture, industry, and defense. The field has seen
rapid advances in technology, but it is difficult to gauge current
capabilities or identify gaps across projects. To this end, our foundry
was assessed via a timed “pressure test”, in which 3
months were given to build organisms to produce 10 molecules unknown
to us in advance. By applying a diversity of new approaches, we produced
the desired molecule or a closely related one for six out of 10 targets
during the performance period and made advances toward production
of the others as well. Specifically, we increased the titers of 1-hexadecanol,
pyrrolnitrin, and pacidamycin D, found novel routes to the enediyne
warhead underlying powerful antimicrobials, established a cell-free
system for monoterpene production, produced an intermediate toward
vincristine biosynthesis, and encoded 7802 individually retrievable
pathways to 540 bisindoles in a DNA pool. Pathways to tetrahydrofuran
and barbamide were designed and constructed, but toxicity or analytical
tools inhibited further progress. In sum, we constructed 1.2 Mb DNA,
built 215 strains spanning five species (<i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>, <i>Escherichia coli</i>, <i>Streptomyces albidoflavus</i>, <i>Streptomyces coelicolor</i>, and <i>Streptomyces
albovinaceus</i>), established two cell-free systems, and performed
690 assays developed in-house for the molecules
