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Researcher
- Adam M Guss
- Josh Michener
- Liangyu Qian
- Andrzej Nycz
- Austin L Carroll
- Isaiah Dishner
- Jeff Foster
- John F Cahill
- Kuntal De
- Serena Chen
- Udaya C Kalluri
- Xiaohan Yang
- Alexander I Kolesnikov
- Alexei P Sokolov
- Alex Walters
- Bekki Mills
- Biruk A Feyissa
- Carrie Eckert
- Chris Masuo
- Clay Leach
- Debjani Pal
- Gerald Tuskan
- Ilenne Del Valle Kessra
- Jay D Huenemann
- Joanna Tannous
- John Wenzel
- Keju An
- Kyle Davis
- Mark Loguillo
- Matthew B Stone
- Paul Abraham
- Shannon M Mahurin
- Tao Hong
- Tomonori Saito
- Victor Fanelli
- Vilmos Kertesz
- Vincent Paquit
- William Alexander
- Yang Liu

This invention is for bacterial strains that can utilize lignocellulose sugars. This will improve the efficiency of bioproduct formation in these strains and reduce the greenhouse-gas emission of an industrial bi

Neutron beams are used around the world to study materials for various purposes.

ORNL has developed bacterial strains that can utilize a common plastic co-monomer as a feedstock. This will help enable modern, petroleum-derived plastics to be converted into value-added chemicals.

Due to a genes unique nucleotide sequences acquired through horizontal gene transfer, the gene has a transcriptional repressor activity and innate enzymatic role.

We have developed bacterial strains that can convert sustainable feedstocks and waste feedstocks into chemical precursors for next generation plastics.

ORNL has identified a panel of novel nylon hydrolases with varied substrate and product selectivity.

Genetic modification of microbes that are thermophiles—ones that grow at elevated temperatures—is extremely challenging. Tools developed for E. coli, a typical host for protein production, typically do not function at elevated temperatures.

The invention provides a gene and methods for maintaining meiotic chromosomal architecture