I'm stoked to publicly share something I have been working on since joining Speculative Technologies: A roadmap for its next coordinated research program called Macromolecular Additive Manufacturing. This technology could lead to new multi-component proteins made from up to one hundred distinct subunits, which would be over a ten-fold increase versus what can be made with living cells.
I don't have hands on experience with it, but Acinetobacter baylyi seems like a useful bug to work with given that it naturally takes up extracellular DNA (no need to transform):
I don't have hands on experience with it, but Acinetobacter baylyi seems like a useful bug to work with given that it naturally takes up extracellular DNA (no need to transform):
https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/48/9/5169/5815822
https://portlandpress.com/essaysbiochem/article-abstract/65/2/309/228154/Acinetobacter-baylyi-ADP1-naturally-competent-for