Growth curves can be divided into phases (lag, exponential, stationary and death) and each has its pitfalls.
A segfault and NaN driven series of disconnected ideas, analyses and just plain silly posts about computational biochemistry, synthetic biology and microbiology.
Tuesday 23 August 2016
Methodological sabotage of growth rates
Following the interest in a previous post about analysing growth curves in Matlab I would like to discuss issues in growth curves that can arise from the methodological/biological side of things. Fitting the data is perfect if the data is perfect, if not, looking at what is wrong by eye is warranted for future corrections.
Growth curves can be divided into phases (lag, exponential, stationary and death) and each has its pitfalls.
Growth curves can be divided into phases (lag, exponential, stationary and death) and each has its pitfalls.
Saturday 20 August 2016
Wild about E. coli
Wild type E. coli is a funny concept, because there are actually multiple contestants for the title...
Tuesday 9 August 2016
Cysteine racemase: an impossible enzyme?
Cysteine racemase is an enzyme (EC 5.1.1.10) that was characterised in lysates long ago, but have never been found since. Is it a real enzyme? Can the reaction happen well? The problem is that racemising via a carbanion intermediate something with a leaving group is not an easy feat.
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