Martin Flatley, a senior staff engineer at Suncor’s Sarnia, Ont., refinery. One floor below Gloor’s lab at Western, fellow biochemistry professors David Edgell and Bogumil Karas were working with students to examine a specific type of algae that had been shown to produce proteins in large quantities. The team was attempting to identify and sequence genomes of organisms that naturally break down napthenic acid, a toxic byproduct that is part of the wastewater produced by the refinery. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
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