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@mariusor Never seen them but I see what you mean. :P I've been using my current sigil for about 6 years. Before that it was a bit more gruesome and just an eyeball.
github.com/RangerMauve/RangerM

Prolapsing code paths and rewiring their guts.

😉👍

hope everyone in new york is having a very communist morning today

@TwoClownsEating @GayDeceiver I totally see it too. A little guy in a hat. Like he's fresh out of the coal mines.

@ellyxir some day. Decriminalize extreme gene editing. ✊✊✊✊

@skryking Claaasic. One of mine loves to time sprinting in front of me such that I almost yeet her across the room as I step forward. I've trained myself to just stop when she comes my way to avoid it. 😸

Remember: Behind every robot that turns evil is an engineer who specifically installed red LEDs into the eyes just for this occasion.

If I eat enough cat food will I grow ears and a tail?

Having cats means you sometimes gey woken up by a claw in your foot because it triggered their kill instinct under the comfortor. At least I'm getting my day started earlier. 😵

@ellyxir If you suffer deeply enough anything is possible 🤪 Maybe these pro tips are why I hate travelling so much.

@ellyxir pro strat: go to the airport the night before and sleep at your terminal until it's time. Usually I set an alarm an hour before the flight.

Thankful for the rng gods blessing me with warmth and dryness tonight.

Twitter (etc) makes everyone think society is way more extreme than it is because the 2% who are actually passionate about [issue] tweet 40 times a day while the 98% who don't care tweet zero times. Democracy by retweet is just the tyranny of whoever has the most free time.

Rubisco is (arguably) the most abundant protein on Earth. (LPP surely comes close, right?) It’s an enzyme that fixes CO₂ into sugars during photosynthesis.

Unfortunately, as most people learn in school, Rubisco is inefficient. Sometimes it confuses O₂ for CO₂ and wastes energy. Plants make up for this in raw concentration; up to half the soluble protein in a leaf is Rubisco.

People have been trying to engineer better Rubiscos for many decades, but it's not easy because the proteins are big, do not fold easily (they need chaperone proteins to help out), are made from 16 subunits in land plants.

But there's a new paper in Nature Plants that looks really interesting. The TL;DR is that a group in Australia figured out how to express plant Rubiscos (and all SEVEN of their folding chaperones) using a set of 3 plasmids inside of E. coli cells. This enabled them to do "directed evolution" of Rubisco in bacterial cells, and quickly find Rubisco mutants that have higher enzymatic efficiency or that fold better.

In addition to the 3 plasmids, the researchers also coaxed E. coli to make ribulose-1,5-biphosphate, or RuBP, which is the 5-carbon sugar that Rubisco smashes into carbon dioxide to make molecules of 3-PGA for central metabolism.

Now, the clever bit is that you RANDOMLY MUTATE the three plasmids encoding the Rubisco to make millions of variants. Then, you transform those mutated plasmids into E. coli. If the E. coli do NOT make a functional Rubisco, RuBP levels build up and kill the cell; the molecule becomes toxic. But if the E. coli DO make a functional Rubisco, then they keep the RuBP levels in check and live just fine.

Using this "screening assay," the researchers found 46 fast-growing colonies of E. coli. Two of those colonies encoded really useful mutations. One mutation (M116L) makes Rubisco about 25–40% faster. The other (A242V) makes it fold and assemble much more efficiently.

They put this mutation into a "hybrid Arabidopsis–tobacco Rubisco," put that into tobacco plants, and measured growth. The plants with M116L grew 75% faster than wildtype.

No guarantees this will scale to more useful crops, like wheat and corn and soybeans etc. But it seems like a nice in vitro assay for faster prototyping!

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