Publications by authors named "Jaimie Gibbons"

The sophisticated, elegant protein-polymers designed by nature can serve as inspiration to redesign and biomanufacture protein-based materials using synthetic biology. Historically, petro-based polymeric materials have dominated industrial activities, consequently transforming our way of living. While this benefits humans, the fabrication and disposal of these materials causes environmental sustainability challenges.

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Anabaena sp. PCC7120 (hereafter Anabaena 7120) is a nitrogen-fixing, filamentous cyanobacterium. Given its diverse metabolism, it serves as an excellent model organism, particularly for studying cell differentiation, nitrogen fixation, photosynthesis, production of high-value chemicals, and synthetic biology.

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Anabaena sp. PCC 7120 (hereafter Anabaena 7120) is a model cyanobacterium for studying pathways such as photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation along with many other metabolic pathways common to plants. In addition, since Anabaena 7120 forms specialized N-fixing cells, called heterocysts, to perform uniquely solar-powered, oxic nitrogen fixation under fixed-nitrogen depleted conditions, this cyanobacterium provides the unique opportunity to study cellular differentiation in bacteria.

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Cyanobacteria photosynthetically produce long-chain hydrocarbons, which are considered as infrastructure-compatible biofuels. However, native cyanobacteria do not produce these hydrocarbons at sufficient rates or yields to warrant commercial deployment. This research sought to identify specific genes required for photosynthetic production of alkanes to enable future metabolic engineering for commercially viable production of alkanes.

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The rapid increase in worldwide population coupled with the increasing demand for fossil fuels has led to an increased urgency to develop sustainable sources of energy and chemicals from renewable resources. Using microorganisms to produce high-value chemicals and next-generation biofuels is one sustainable option and is the focus of much current research. Cyanobacteria are ideal platform organisms for chemical and biofuel production because they can be genetically engineered to produce a broad range of products directly from CO , H O, and sunlight, and require minimal nutrient inputs.

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We evaluated fermentation capabilities of five strains of Scheffersomyces stipitis (WT-2-1, WT-1-11, 14-2-6, 22-1-1, and 22-1-12) that had been produced by UV-C mutagenesis and selection for improved xylose fermentation to ethanol using an integrated automated robotic work cell. They were incubated under both facultative and anaerobic conditions to evaluate ethanol production on glucose, xylose, cellobiose, and a combination of all three sugars. The medium contained 50 g/L total sugar and 5 g/L yeast extract.

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