Historical Perspectives on the Bacterium Vibrio natriegens and its Potential to Revolutionize Bioengineering
Climate modelling allows us to forecast changes in global climate patterns while allowing us to better understand past events. Current models predict that Antarctic ice sheets should have decreased in the time period between 1975 and 2017. But the opposite has happened.   On page 34, Sauvé et al. examine the role of natural variability and anthropogenic forcing on climate models that could explain Antarctic ice trends. Pictured on the cover is an artistic rendition of the Antarctic ice sheets.
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Keywords

Vibrio natriegens
Molecular genetics
Bioengineering
Fastest doubling time
Taxonomy

How to Cite

Williams, J. M. (2018). Historical Perspectives on the Bacterium Vibrio natriegens and its Potential to Revolutionize Bioengineering. McGill Science Undergraduate Research Journal, 13(1), 50–53. https://doi.org/10.26443/msurj.v13i1.36

Abstract

Background: Vibrio natriegens is an aquatic bacterium that has the fastest doubling time of any currently known organism at approximate 9.8 min. This review delves into the early categorization of V. natriegens, its phylogeny and physiology, and the efforts aimed at studying its potential to enhance both micro- and macro-scale biotechnology.

Methods: Twenty-eight research papers from scientific literature databases including PubMED (US National Library of Medicine), National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), and the American Society for Microbiology Journals were used in this study.

Summary: Almost sixty years after the original isolate, microbiologists and bioengineers alike are expressing a renewed interest in V. natriegens as a possible replacement for Escherichia coli. Recent biotechnological efforts have been successful in developing the necessary genetic systems for such a transition. The productivity of V. natriegens suggests that the organism can also be used in large scale bio-refineries producing nutraceuticals and other bio-products.

https://doi.org/10.26443/msurj.v13i1.36
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