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Showing posts with the label isothermal DNA assembly

J. Craig Venter Institute has created the first synthetic organellar genome

A team of researchers from the J. Craig Venter Institute has created the first synthetic organellar genome, using a method called isothermal DNA assembly to construct a synthetic mouse mitochondrial genome from hundreds of overlapping oligonucleotides. The work, published online yesterday in   Nature Methods , is the latest in a series of synthetic biology achievements by the group. JCVI researchers reported in  Science  in 2008  that they had put together four Mycoplasma genitalium  quarter genomes in  Escherichia coli  and yeast to create the first synthetic genome, dubbed  M. genitalium  JCVI-1.0. They later tweaked this process, showing that they could assemble the  synthetic  M. genitalium  genome in a single step in yeast. And earlier this year the team took another step toward synthetic life when they made a synthetic  M. mycoides  genome, transplanted it into another bacterial species,  M. capricolum , ...