The Isolation chip (or ichip) is a method of culturing bacteria. Using regular methods, 99% of bacterial species are not able to be cultured as they do not grow in conditions made in a laboratory, a problem called the "Great Plate Count Anomaly".
The ichip instead cultures bacterial species within its soil environment. The soil is diluted in molten agar and nutrients such that only a single cell, on average, grows in the ichip's small compartments or wells, hence the term "isolation". The chip is then enclosed in a semipermeable plastic membrane and buried back in the dirt to allow in nutrients not available in the lab.
With this culturing method, about 50 to 60 percent of bacterial species are able to survive.
[ Notably, the bacterial species '' Eleftheria terrae'', which makes the antibiotic teixobactin that has shown promise against many drug-resistant strains like methicillin-resistant ''Staphylococcus aureus'', was discovered using the ichip in 2015. In addition to antibiotics, it is argued that anti-cancer agents, anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressives (which have previously been discovered from bacteria) as well as potential energy sources could be discovered.][ The ichip was developed by the drug discovery company ]NovoBiotic Pharmaceuticals
NovoBiotic Pharmaceuticals is a privately held, early-stage biotechnology company focused on the discovery and development of new drugs from natural sources.
Early history and focus
The company was founded in 2003 in Cambridge, MA (USA), by Northe ...
, founded by Kim Lewis and Slava Epstein.[
]
References
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Bacteria