Dual-BONCAT reveals distinct subpopulations of anabolically active cells.
Mankel D, Maierhaba Y, Momjian C, Calabrese F, Duhamel S
Soil Health
Beneath every thriving garden bed, billions of soil microbes take turns waking up and going dormant depending on moisture, temperature, and what your plants are feeding them — and this technique is now sharp enough to catch them in the act, separately and at the same time.
Scientists normally had to run separate experiments to study different groups of microbes, which introduced variability and guesswork. Now they can label two microbial groups with different chemical tags in a single experiment and watch both at once. This makes it much easier to understand which soil organisms are active under different conditions — like after rain versus drought — without comparing apples to oranges across separate tests.
Key Findings
First validated use of two different non-canonical amino acid tags simultaneously in a single BONCAT experiment, replacing the previous one-tag limit.
The dual-label approach reduces uncertainty caused by comparing separate parallel treatments by keeping both microbial populations in the same experimental context.
The method provides precise spatial information about which microorganisms are active under distinct conditions or at different time points within the same sample.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists developed a new lab technique called Dual-BONCAT that can simultaneously track two distinct groups of microbes in one experiment, revealing which microorganisms are metabolically active and when — with less experimental noise than previous single-label approaches.
Abstract Preview
Bio-orthogonal non-canonical amino acid tagging (BONCAT) has emerged as a prominent molecular technique that enables microbial ecologists to visualize and identify metabolically active cells in cul...
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