Biochemistry (6) | ![]() |
Bioreactors (5) | ![]() |
Biochemical engineer Christina Smolke and colleagues had been working on the problem of synthesizing opioids and other plant-based medicines in the lab for about a decade.
They do incredible and beautiful biochemistry, "she said.""But they do it in a way that's inefficient.
of which are unknown and likely unrelated to optimized production in large-volume bioreactors, would need to be addressed for engineered yeast to ever realize home-brew biosynthesis of medicinal opiates at meaningful yields."
called a bioreactor, which simulates conditions found inside the Body temperature, humidity, acidity and nutrient composition all need to be just right for the stem cells to transform into bone-growing cells called osteoblasts,
States Professor Joseph Perry, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Georgia Tech,"sol-gels...such as phosphonic acids are well known...
understanding the biochemical sensing between organisms could have far reaching implications in ecology, biology, and robotics.
engineered gene circuits in E coli, microfluid bioreactors, and robot movement. The bacteria in the mathematical experiment exhibited their genetic circuitry by either turning green or red, according to
The scaffold is nourished then in a bioreactor enabling new tissue to grow and colonise the scaffold.
Ott began by suspending the decellularised forelimb in a bioreactor, plumbing the collagen artery into an artificial circulatory system to provide nutrients, oxygen and electrical stimulation to the limb.
This gives us a window into the future to see what bacteria will do to evade drugs that we design before a drug is deployed said co-author Bruce Donald a professor of computer science and biochemistry at Duke.
said Gregory Weiss, UCI professor of chemistry and molecular biology & biochemistry. n our paper, we describe a device for pulling apart tangled proteins
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