On Fri, Feb 6, 2015 at 11:22 AM, Josiah Zayner <
josiah...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The problem with this Jacob is that you are fighting against thermodynamics
> and metabolism.
I understand you're saying there's a burden from a 'natural'
bacteria-pulled-from-its-habitat perspective, but it seems ridiculous
when compared to how humans have transformed organisms with
agriculture. If the bacteria aren't doing what you want, the you
haven't engineered it properly. Thermodynamics, metabolism, entropy
are all things to think about, but the earth doesn't have a 'problem'
per-se... we're close to the sun, cold and entropy increases with the
distance from the sun, so we've got the energy.
> The amount of energy cost to export proteins is huge, in the
> folding, transport, generation of transport proteins. Also, one needs to
> think about ligands, which many proteins contain or need to fold. I think
> the reason that this avenue has not been explored thoroughly is that you
> will be trying to optimize many different processes with many bottlenecks.
I agree.
> Also, disrupting cells using some detergent (SDS or something) and maybe
> some freeze-thawing is darn easy.
But it isn't very interesting, is it? I mean, to me that's downright
boring... why waste my time doing extractions then discarding the
waste carcasses and having to deal with taking out the trash when I
could just spend some more time laying on the couch or slouching in my
office chair 'thinking' of how to just get the system to pump out when
glucose/energy is present?
If you're looking for a turn-key solution, then sure lysing cells
get's you there today in a snap... I guess I'm just not sure if that's
what the OP is interested in (the title of the thread /is/ exocytosis,
not protein expression/overexpression/purification).