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In a deft act of genomic manipulation, researchers at the J. Craig
Venter Institute, in Rockville, MD, transplanted a bacterial genome
into yeast, altered it, and then transplanted it back into a hollowed
bacterial shell, producing a viable new microbe. The technique may
provide a way to more easily genetically engineer organisms not
commonly studied in the lab and could aid in the expanding effort to
create microbes that can produce fuels or clean up toxic chemicals.
"This research enhances our capabilities in genome engineering and
opens new applications," says Jim Collins, a bioengineer at Boston
University, who was not involved in the research. "I see this as an
important advance relevant to the bioenergy and biomaterials
industries."
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Thanks to decades of scientific research, microbes such as yeast and
E. coli
come with an arsenal of genetic tools that have enabled researchers to
enact genetic overhauls of increasing complexity--replacing entire
chemical pathways, for example, to make microbes that can perform more
complex tasks or produce materials more efficiently. But many microbes
of industrial interest, such as those with unique capabilities for
generating chemicals, aren't as easily hackable. Target organisms
include photosynthetic microbes, which scientists hope can be
engineered to efficiently turn light into fuel. By inserting the
genomes of these bacteria into yeast, the researchers at the Venter
Institute are more easily able to engineer them. "People want the
capability of yeast or
E. coli but want to have the photosynthetic apparatus there," says David Berry, a partner at Flagship Ventures and the 2007 TR35 innovator of the year. "Combining those two genomes would be interesting in the biofuels world."
The new technology emerged from the Venter Institute's high-profile
quest to create life from scratch--generating a synthetic genome and
then using it to control, or reboot, a recipient cell. In 2007, Venter
researchers published a paper describing a genome transplant,
in which a genome from one type of bacteria was transferred to a
closely related one, giving the host the characteristics of its donor.
Then, last year, the researchers created a synthetic genome by stitching together pieces of synthesized DNA.
To build a synthetic organism, however, researchers will have to
transplant that synthetic genome into a cell and have it successfully
reboot the cell. But that last step has proved problematic. The
synthetic genome was assembled in yeast, which means it lacked some of
the molecular markings characteristic of bacteria. Researchers
discovered that without those markings, the host bacterium viewed the
transplanted genome as a foreign invader and destroyed it.
The new technique, published online in the journal
Science, provides a way around that hurdle. Sanjay Vashee and colleagues first transplanted the genome of
Mycoplasma mycoides
into yeast. While scientists had previously grown pieces of bacterial
DNA in yeast, this is the first instance of growing an entire bacterial
genome this way. Using existing tools for genetically engineering
yeast, researchers then chemically altered the bacterial genetic
material so that it carried the molecular markings characteristic of
bacteria. They transplanted the modified genome into
Mycoplasma capricolum, a species closely related to the
mycoides genome donor, to create a viable
mycoides cell.
The researchers now aim to test the technique on other bacteria. "We
want to start transferring this technology to organisms that are more
relevant industrially or for biofuels," says Vashee. For example, he
says, genetic pathways from organisms that can break down environmental
pollutants could be engineered into bacteria that could survive in
harsh and contaminated environments, such as acidic ponds, and then
used to clean up those areas.
The technology will likely find its way to Synthetic Genomics,
a biofuels start-up founded by Venter that is developing genetically
modified algae to produce fuels and other chemicals. The company
announced a $300 million partnership with ExxonMobil last month.
* Technology Review Magazine
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