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Not from my searches. How do you plan to purify it from a higher plant?
A search of "alginate synthesis" site:igem.org shows up as this paper: “Genome-Scale Metabolic Network Analysis of the Opportunistic Pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO1”, that cites, ref 46; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15813726
I could have saved a ton of time with a simple “bacterial alginate synthesis.” Turns out it is in biofilm production for pathogenic strains of P. aregunosa. There is this runaway process of overproduction of the exopolysaccharide alginate.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2435354/ well characterized. Also bacterial.
See table 1. Have fun 18+ kbp. how much do you like to BioBrick?
How ironic. if it microbiology may now be the source of the very thing it was cultured on all along.
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Tanaka, T., Kawasaki, K., Daimon, S., Kitagawa, W., Yamamoto, K., Tamaki, H., Tanaka, M., Nakatsu, C. H. & Kamagata, Y. (2014). A hidden pitfall in the preparation of agar media undermines microorganism cultivability. Appl Environ Microbiol 80, 7659–7666.
There's an article on g.xylinus cellulose matrix used as growth medium, and it showed much higher bacterial survival rate than agar agar.
And no inhibition.
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Xu, F. & Baba, Y. Polymer solutions and entropic-based systems for double-stranded DNA capillary electrophoresis and microchip electrophoresis. ELECTROPHORESIS 25, 2332–2345 (2004).
DOI: 10.1002/elps.200405923