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Towards culturing the microbe of your choice.
Environmental Microbiology Reports 2020 October 19
Principal challenges in environmental microbiology include determining the functions of specific microorganisms, when and where those functions change, and why. Unveiling this information for creatures on the micron scale is exquisitely difficult, but culturing microorganisms offers a sturdy experimental foundation for such queries. Unfortunately, bringing microbes into culture presents its own set of challenges, which, combined with their vast diversity, means most microorganisms remain uncultivated (Schloss et al., 2016; Lloyd et al., 2018; Steen et al., 2019). Microbiologists may know a microbe's exact size, location, abundance, and the fine details of its genome, but still struggle to bring it into culture. But what if we could culture any microorganism we wanted at will? In fact, researchers have already taken the first steps towards this future, and additional emerging technologies will help make culturing the microbe of your choice a reality. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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