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Home › Blog › Phil Hugenholtz on metagenomics and ecogenomics in Australian Life Scientist

March 13, 2011

Phil Hugenholtz on metagenomics and ecogenomics in Australian Life Scientist

In research published in Nature in 2007, Hugenholtz, along with collaborators from the California Institute of Technology and Diversa (now Verenium) Corporation, used metagenomics to detail the process by which a dry wood feeding termite, a Nasutitermes species, breaks down cellulose. 
They generated 62 million base pairs – a “drop in the ocean by today’s standards,” says Hugenholtz – and from that were able to reconstruct the major players in cellulose metabolism, including the roles played by the bacteria belonging to the treponeme spirochetes as well as fibrobacter, relatives of which are also found in the cows rumen. 
Read more at Australian Life Scientist

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bacteria, biofuel, biomass, cow rumen, metagenomics, microbial genomics, Phil Hugenholtz, termite

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