We decided to use E. coli to replicate our plasmids, which meant that the plasmids would not only need an E. coli origin of replication, but two ampicillin resistance genes we could use for selection -- one that would work in E. coli, and one that would work in Bacillus subtilis. We used a 6-piece Gibson assembly designed on SnapGene to create our initial plasmids with these features and the Streptococcus thermophilus homologous sequences that would become the landing pad for the S. thermophilus genome.
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Keoni explains the next step in the process, something he would do again, and again, and again...
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