Synthetic Screens, Genes, and De Novo Proteins: Engineering Gene Regulation through Creative Experimental Design - podcast episode cover

Synthetic Screens, Genes, and De Novo Proteins: Engineering Gene Regulation through Creative Experimental Design

Aug 20, 202417 min
--:--
--:--
Listen in podcast apps:
Metacast
Spotify
Youtube
RSS

Episode description

Synthetic technologies allow scientists to venture into uncharted waters, asking unique research questions and finding previously unattainable solutions to some of life’s biggest mysteries. From gene editing to protein engineering, synthesized DNA libraries enable researchers to grasp once unreachable high-throughput screening applications and dismantle barriers between experimental ideation and execution. In this podcast series, Synthetic Screens, Genes, and De Novo Proteins, The Scientist’s Creative Services Team talks to experts about their experiences implementing Twist Bioscience’s synthesized long double-stranded gene pools, called Multiplexed Gene Fragments, for high-throughput screening.

 

In this episode, Deanna MacNeil from The Scientist spoke with Josh Tycko, a neurobiology postdoctoral researcher in Michael Greenberg's laboratory at Harvard Medical School, about investigating gene regulation with synthetic DNA libraries.

For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android
Open in Metacast
Synthetic Screens, Genes, and De Novo Proteins: Engineering Gene Regulation through Creative Experimental Design | The Scientist’s LabTalk podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast