ABOVE: SCOTT WISEMAN

After the Scripps Research Institute in Florida had new facilities installed to accommodate a massive microbial biobank it inherited from Pfizer, chemist Ben Shen eagerly welcomed the resource. It contains more than 210,000 frozen or freeze-dried microbial strains that Shen and his colleagues are now mining for natural products.

In May 2019, a standalone cold room was installed on the Scripps campus.
MARK VAN HOY, SCRIPPS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Inside the cold room are large racks that hang from rails and house bundles of glass ampules containing freeze-dried microbial samples that Shen hopes to mine for natural products.
SCOTT WISEMAN
The collection also contains thousands of microbial samples housed in freezers inside the building where Shen works.
SCOTT WISEMAN
Shen and his colleagues can culture the bacteria to isolate natural products they make, or the researchers can sequence the microbes’ genomes and look for gene clusters that...

Read the full story.

Jef Akst is managing editor of The Scientist. Email her at jakst@the-scientist.com

Interested in reading more?

The Scientist ARCHIVES

Become a Member of

Receive full access to more than 35 years of archives, as well as TS Digest, digital editions of The Scientist, feature stories, and much more!
Already a member?