Tools for the microbiome : nano and beyond

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Date
2015-12-22
Authors
Biteen, Julie S.
Blainey, Paul C.
Cardon, Zoe G.
Chun, Miyoung
Church, George M.
Dorrestein, Pieter C.
Fraser, Scott E.
Gilbert, Jack A.
Jansson, Janet K.
Knight, Rob
Miller, Jeff F.
Ozcan, Aydogan
Prather, Kimberly A.
Quake, Stephen R.
Ruby, Edward G.
Silver, Pamela A.
Taha, Sharif
van den Engh, Ger
Weiss, Paul S.
Wong, Gerard C. L.
Wright, Aaron T.
Young, Thomas D.
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10.1021/acsnano.5b07826
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Abstract
The microbiome presents great opportunities for understanding and improving the world around us and elucidating the interactions that compose it. The microbiome also poses tremendous challenges for mapping and manipulating the entangled networks of interactions among myriad diverse organisms. Here, we describe the opportunities, technical needs, and potential approaches to address these challenges, based on recent and upcoming advances in measurement and control at the nanoscale and beyond. These technical needs will provide the basis for advancing the largely descriptive studies of the microbiome to the theoretical and mechanistic understandings that will underpin the discipline of microbiome engineering. We anticipate that the new tools and methods developed will also be more broadly useful in environmental monitoring, medicine, forensics, and other areas.
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© American Chemical Society, 2015. This article is posted here by permission of American Chemical Society; copying and redistribution for non-commercial research and education purposes only. The definitive version was published in ACS Nano 10 (2016): 6-37, doi:10.1021/acsnano.5b07826.
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ACS Nano 10 (2016): 6-37
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