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In this elegant research vessel, Craig Venter set sail around the world to shotgun sequence the millions of viruses and bacteria in every spoonful of seawater. From the first five ocean samples, this team grew the number of known genes on the planet by 10x and the number of genes involved in solar energy conversion by 100x. The ocean microorganisms have evolved over a longer period of time and have pathways that are more efficient than photosynthesis.

Another discovery: every 200 miles across the open ocean, the microbial genes are up to 85% different. The oceans are not homogenous masses. They consist of myriad uncharted regions of ecological diversity… and the world’s largest genetic database.

From the collection of digital genomes, we are learning to decode and reprogram the information systems of biology. Like computer hackers, we can leverage a prior library of evolved code, assemblers and subsystems. Many of the radical applications lie outside of medicine.

At the Venter Institute, Craig Venter and Hamilton Smith are leading the Minimal Genome Project. They take the Mycoplasma genitalium from the human urogenital tract, and strip out 200 unnecessary genes, thereby creating a simple synthetic organism that can self-replicate (at about 300 genes). They plan to layer new functionality on to this artificial genome, by splicing cassettes of novel genes discovered in the oceans for energy conversion from sunlight. These synthetic cells have could be used for a variety of materials or energy applications, for example, to generate biofuels from the sun’s energy.

8 responses to “Sorcerer II”

  1. Now that’s cool! When is he sailing out again? Does he need a microbial ecologist on the verge of defending his Ph.D. thesis? 🙂 I’m telling you, the minimal genome is going to need nitrogen fixation, and incidentally I’ve been working on nifH gene diversity and resilience in stressed environments.

    All kidding aside, it’s so cool you’ve been able to make it to places that for most of the people in the microbial ecology world are considered to where the history of our science is being made.

  2. Steve, can you please get the Google twins to buy Venter a Trident nuclear sub so he can officially don the title, "Captain Nemo?"

  3. I once heard a funny story about the sequencing project. Turns out that unless you use new pipes for every sampling, you have to be be aware that you are also sequencing all the critters that live in the pipes from which you draw the water.

  4. I read a good article about this guy once I think, or saw a documentary – I forget.

  5. Very informative! thanks for your wealth of knowledge about extreme machines. Be good!

    😉

  6. thanks y’all.

    Eppie: there is some more info here (full disclosure: I am on the Board of this company)

  7. This just in, from Technology Review:
    The ocean hosts a stunningly–and surprisingly–diverse menagerie of microorganisms, according to a massive genetic study published today.

    "We have not understood much about our own planet and our own environment," Venter told Technology Review from his boat, the Sorcerer II, currently in the Sea of Cortez, in Mexico. "We’ve been missing as much as 99 percent of the life forms and biology out there."

    The first set of results, published this week in three papers in the journal PLoS Biology, revealed six million new proteins, doubling the number of known protein sequences. "Everywhere we sampled, we found new proteins," says Venter.

    In fact, every environment sampled showed high genetic diversity, both within and between samples. The findings are challenging the notion of species in microorganisms. "When you look at microbes, they don’t appear to be individual species"

    "Microbial communities are almost like a superorganism, where each microbe is contributing to community as a whole," says Weinstock. "We really need to characterize the metagenome and analyze the genes and protein products as an aggregate."

    Venter and others eventually hope to find proteins that can be co-opted to create novel bacterial machines–proteins involved in hydrogen production or carbon fixation, for example, that could one day be engineered to boost the carbon-fixing capacity of the ocean or to create fuel-producing bacteria. "Genes are the design component of the future," says Venter.
    ——
    Also, PLoS has a special collection of open-access articles, including an interactive graphic display of the data and a slide-show presentation by Venter out in the Sea of Cortez.

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