[DIYbio] Re: Phosphorescent Proteins and Plants

I wonder if you could take dinoflagellate chromosomes and put it into plant nucleus?

That would give you polyploid plants that glow when touched??






On Saturday, October 20, 2012 7:20:15 PM UTC+2, Sebastian wrote:

I was thinking about this for a while now. What about forgetting auto-luminescent plants and trying phosphorescent plants instead? I spoke with some colleagues and they all said to keep it hush hush in case it works and patent the crap out of it. I would rather have the brilliant minds of the DIYBio community take a crack at the idea and if it works then go open source. Anywho, my question is: Does anyone know of phosphorescent proteins that could be expressed in plants?  Charge during the day, glow at night. Ive seen some papers on non-exponential light release with phosphorescent molecules but they were all kinds of salts. Ive also heard that high amounts of tryptophan residues have a visible phosphorescent activity. The pipe-dream of high light output via lux pathway seems to be just that. As another DIYBiologist said, the metabolic rate required for sustained illumination would kill the plant...unless there is something we are overlooking of course.

Sebastian S Cocioba
CEO & Founder
New York Botanics, LLC

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