Team:TU-Delft/Test2

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                    <li class="title"><h3>Overview</h3></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/1">Welcome to Visions of Discovery</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/3">Introduction</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/5">Facilities Map</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/7">Discovery Park News</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/9">Contact Information</a>
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                            <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/11">Contacts for Students</a></li>
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                            <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/13">Contacts for Faculty</a></li>
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                            <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/15">Contacts for Partners</a></li>
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                    <li class="title"><h3>Discovery</h3></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/#/page/1">Introduction</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/#/page/3">Collaboration Sparks Discovery</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/#/page/5">Impact on Discovery</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/#/page/7">Growing the Research Enterprise</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/#/page/9">Conclusion</a></li>
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                    <li class="title"><h3>Delivery</h3></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/delivery/#/page/1">Introduction</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/delivery/#/page/3">Discovery with Delivery</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/delivery/#/page/5">Pipeline to Commercialization</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/delivery/#/page/7">Impact on Delivery</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/delivery/#/page/9">Conclusion</a></li>
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                    <li class="title"><h3>Engagement</h3></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/engagement/#/page/1">Introduction</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/engagement/#/page/3">Learning Sparked for Students</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/engagement/#/page/5">Impact on Engagement</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/engagement/#/page/7">Transforming a University</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/engagement/#/page/9">Conclusion</a></li>
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                    <li class="title"><h3>Partnerships</h3></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/1">Introduction</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/3">Partnering with Institutions</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/5">Creating Global Opportunities</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/7">Global Partners</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/9">Impact on Partnerships</a></li>
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                    <li><a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/partnerships/#/page/11">Conclusion</a></li>
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    <h2>Delivering as an engine for economic development</h2>
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    <h3 class="tagline">Large-scale research drives company, job creation</h3>
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    <p>Through Discovery Park, its industry partnerships and link to <a href="http://www.purdueresearchpark.com/" class="iframe">Purdue Research Park</a>, Purdue is changing how a 21st century university translates research more quickly into viable commercial products and processes - and how that same research creates jobs and sparks the overall economy.</p>
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    <p>These efforts are helping address the challenges for affordable health care, alternative energy, nanoscale devices, biomarkers, entrepreneurship, cancer diagnostic and treatment, manufacturers, the life sciences and innovative learning for grades P-12.</p>
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    <p>"Purdue is an energizer for the state's economy," says Richard O. Buckius, Purdue's vice president for research. "Our faculty are creating new businesses and providing quality, high-tech jobs for Indiana, the Midwest, the nation and the world. We are collaborating with existing businesses to make them more competitive globally. Our model for discovery with an emphasis on delivery is working and gaining national and international momentum."</p>
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    <p style="margin-top:20px;">As one of Indiana's largest employers, Purdue contributes $2.2 billion to the state's economy annually. Through Discovery Park, Purdue is delivering on its land-grant mission by turning its large-scale interdisciplinary research efforts into an engine for the state and region's economy. To date, Discovery Park, with its $200 million in new facilities, equipment and laboratories, has:</p>
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        <li>Helped generate more than 40 patents based on Purdue research.</li>
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        <li>Assisted in the startup of 30 companies, creating 165 jobs, with many of those companies now located at Purdue Research Park.</li>
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        <li>Developed strategic collaborations with more than 25 regional, national and global companies, foundations and research institutions.</li>
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    <p>"Universities that are going to succeed and succeed well into the future are those that have torn down the silos - that allow faculty across disciplines to work together," says Joseph H. Hornett, senior vice president, treasurer and chief operating officer of the Purdue Research Foundation. "And, of course, because of Discovery Park, that's happening at Purdue University."</p>
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    <p>Collaborating with the <a href="http://www.prf.org/" class="iframe">Purdue Research Foundation</a>, Discovery Park has created the $1.5 million Emerging Innovations Fund, which will provide funding support for early-stage technologies at the Purdue Research Park through small, finite grants. </p>
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    <h2 class="break">Discovery with Delivery</h2>
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        <p><a href="http://www.purdueresearchpark.com/" class="iframe">Purdue Research Park</a> employs 3,000 people in 157 companies, including 90 technology-based firms. The park was ranked the nation's best university research park in 2005, in part for its success in nurturing startups. It also was Indiana's first certified technology park.</p>
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        <p><a href="http://www.indianactsi.org/" class="iframe">The Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute</a> is a prime example of how Purdue and Indiana University are working together in the life sciences field. This effort will bring $25 million to the state the next five years to improve the process by which the laboratory discoveries of basic science are transformed into new medical treatments and products.
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            <p><h1>The Focus</h1>
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        </p><p>"CTSI's mission is to effectively deliver that research so that it can have a positive impact on people's lives. And this partnership with IU will help Purdue establish stronger links in other important research areas."</p>
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Bacteria can be good or bad. This is the way of saying that bacteria are respectively beneficial or harmful for human beings.  
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        <p class="caption">Professor Jerry Woodall works with doctoral student Charles Allen on hydrogen-driven alternative energy project.</p>
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        <p class="caption">Entrepreneurial minded students present business plan at annual competition.</p>
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        <p><a href="http://www.purdue.edu/discoverypark/rche/" class="iframe">The Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering</a>, which was named a major center in the park in 2008, has formed partnerships with national hospitals and organizations and has tackled nearly 30 projects since its 2005 launch with a $3 million gift from the Regenstrief Foundation. </p>
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        <p>To date, Regenstrief's research helped launch the <a href="http://www.indianapatientsafety.org/" class="iframe">Indiana Patient Safety Center</a> in 2007 and expanded funding opportunities for a statewide telehealth effort. Regenstrief led the 2008 launch of the <a href="http://www.purdue.edu/discoverypark/rche/about/centers/cat/" class="iframe">Indiana Center for Assistive Technology</a> in partnership with the Family and Social Services Administration's Division of Disability and Rehabilitative Services Indiana. The center also assisted in a project with the <a href="http://www.in.gov/isdh/" class="iframe">Indiana State Department of Health</a> that outlined potential communication and response gaps with the state's 92 county health departments in the event of a pandemic outbreak.
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Good bacteria have always existed. Some species help humans to digest certain foods, others are important in the production process of, for example, milk, cheese or yogurt. There are even bacterial species that help agriculture by fixating nitrogen for more fertile croplands. This majority of all species are harmless to humans.
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        <h2>Pipeline to Commercialization</h2>
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    <p>Discovery Park, Purdue's on-campus initiative to bring innovation through interdisciplinary action, is changing how a 21st century university translates viable research into viable commercial products in areas ranging from biomedicine and pharmaceuticals to nanotechnology and biotechnology</p>
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            <p><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/8/8c/Salmonella_enterica.jpg"  width="440px"; />
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<p>Purdue's commercialization efforts in biomedical technologies, for example, gained international attention when the university received a $100 million endowment to create the Alfred Mann Institute for Biomedical Development.</p>
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        <p>Since its launch in 2001, Discovery Park has received more than $250 million in funding for sponsored research, assisted in the launch of 30 companies, and has generated more than 40 patents. Its modern research equipment and facilities are prompting companies to inquire about how partnering with Purdue will help them gain a competitive advantage.</p>
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Although the bad bacteria are a minority, they are well known. These species can spoil food or make you sick. Take for example ''Salmonella enterica'' that is a natural part of the chicken’s flora. Chickens have no problems with this bacteria strain, but humans can get very sick because of this little brad.
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    <p>From a vaccine that fights bird flu to nanostructured surfaces for improving artificial joints, many innovations that emerge from Discovery Park find their business legs at Purdue Research Parks. With locations across Indiana - in West Lafayette, Indianapolis, Merrillville and New Albany - the 1,200-acre Purdue Research Park network is home to more than 160 companies, of which 100+ are technology related.</p>
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<p class="narrow">Purdue Research Parks currently operates nearly 400,000 square feet of high-tech incubation space, where company growth is accelerated through award-winning business development support. Since the late 1990s, the research parks have launched nearly 60 technology ventures, including several focused on drug development, tissue-engineering and medical-device development.</p>
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Al together we have to respect what they do for us, but have to watch out which bacteria we catch. The iGEM TU Delft want to raise attention for the good bacteria simply because they deserve it!</p>
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    <h2>Impact on Delivery</h2>
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    <p>Since its launch in 2001, Discovery Park has provided a  platform for driving Purdue's pursuit of funding for large-scale  interdisciplinary research projects. Here is a list of success stories through  Discovery Park that demonstrate how teamwork on a university campus is making a  difference in the world of discovery:</p>
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        <a class="thumb1">Nanoprobes may reduce chemo side effects: </a>
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        <a class="thumb2">Endocyte awarded patent for vitamin receptor</a>
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        <a class="thumb3">Nano to treat spinal cord injuries</a>
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        <a class="thumb4">Purdue-led team wins global event</a>
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        <a class="thumb5">C3BIO aims efforts at energy from biomass</a>
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        <a class="thumb6">Competitions bring out best of student entrepreneurs</a>
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            <h3>Nanoprobes may reduce chemo side effects</h3>
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            <p>Tiny nanoprobes have shown to be effective in delivering cancer drugs more directly to tumor cells - mitigating the damage to nearby healthy cells - and Purdue University research has shown that the nanoprobes are getting the drugs to right cellular compartments.</p>
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            <p>Professor Joseph Irudayaraj and graduate student Jiji Chen, both in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, have found that the nanoprobes, or nanorods, when coated with the breast cancer drug Herceptin, are reaching the endosomes of cells, mimicking the delivery of the drug on its own. Endosomes perform a sorting function to deliver drugs and other substances to the appropriate locations. </p>
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            <p>"We have demonstrated the ability to track these nanoparticles in different cellular compartments of live cells and show where they collect quantitatively," said Irudayaraj, whose results were published early online in the journal ACS Nano. "Our methods will allow us to calculate the quantities of a drug needed to treat a cancer cell because now we know how these nanoparticles are being distributed to different parts of the cell."</p>
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            <p><a class="iframe" href="http://www.purdue.edu/uns/x/2009b/091214IrudayarajEndosomes.html">Learn More</a></p>  
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            <h3>Endocyte awarded patent for vitamin receptor binding drug delivery conjugates</h3>
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            <p>Officials at Endocyte Inc., a cancer drug discovery and development company, announced Tuesday (Oct. 27, 2009) that the company has been awarded a patent from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office covering vitamin receptor binding anticancer agents.</p>
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<p>The patent, entitled "Vitamin Receptor Binding Drug Delivery Conjugates" (U.S. Patent No. 7,601,332), covers novel conjugation linkages and anticancer agents, including Endocyte's EC145, which is currently in development as a potential treatment for ovarian and non-small cell lung cancers.</p>
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<p>The patent represents years of research into Endocyte's groundbreaking technology that links potent anticancer agents to receptor binding moieties on the surfaces of cells. The technology utilizes a proprietary "linker" technology that connects the anticancer agent to the appropriate receptor binding moiety to form a conjugate. The moiety enables the conjugate to remain stable while in circulation and be delivered selectively into cancer cells. The novel "linker" causes the anticancer agent to be released in its intact and fully active form within the cells. This patented combination of targeting moiety-linker-drug conjugates describe a number of Endocyte conjugates, including its lead drug candidate, EC145, which uses the vitamin folate as the targeting moiety and which is currently in Phase 2 clinical trials.</p>
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            <h3>Findings show nanomedicine promising for treating spinal cord injuries </h3>
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            <p><img src="/discoverypark/viewbook/images/delivery/nano-impact.gif" class="bordered right" />Researchers at Purdue University have discovered a new approach for repairing damaged nerve fibers in spinal cord injuries using nano-spheres that could be injected into the blood shortly after an accident.</p>
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            <p>The synthetic "copolymer micelles" are drug-delivery spheres about 60 nanometers in diameter, or roughly 100 times smaller than the diameter of a red blood cell.</p>
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            <p>Researchers have been studying how to deliver drugs for cancer treatment and other therapies using these spheres. Medications might be harbored in the cores and ferried to diseased or damaged tissue.</p>
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            <p>Purdue researchers have now shown that the micelles themselves repair damaged axons, fibers that transmit electrical impulses in the spinal cord.</p>
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            <p>"That was a very surprising discovery," said Ji-Xin Cheng, professor in the Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering and Department of Chemistry. "Micelles have been used for 30 years as drug-delivery vehicles in research, but no one has ever used them directly as a medicine."</p>
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            <h3>Purdue-IU led team wins global entrepreneurship competition</h3>
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            <p> GlucaGo LLC, a life sciences company led by a trio from Purdue and Indiana universities, captured the 2009 Global Idea to Product Competition and claimed the $10,000 top prize, beating 14 other teams that qualified by winning local competitions.</p>
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            <p>The Global I2P entrepreneurship event, held Oct. 30 and 31 in Austin, Texas, featured teams from 19 universities and eight countries - Great Britain, Portugal, Japan, Sweden, Germany, Ireland and Brazil, and U.S. competitors from Georgia, Indiana, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Texas, Colorado and New Hampshire.</p>
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            <p>In addition to winning the McCombs School of Business Global Championship category, GlucaGo received the Best Showcase overall award for developing an emergency kit that automatically mixes and injects medication for diabetics. Leading the GlucaGo team are Rush Bartlett, a doctoral student in biomedical engineering at Purdue who also is completing an MBA at IU; Arthur Chlebowski, a doctoral student in biomedical engineering at Purdue; and Peter Greco, who is pursuing an MBA from Purdue.</p>
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            <p><a class="iframe" href="http://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/faculty/2009/091105ClementGlobal.html">Learn More</a></p>
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            <h3>C3BIO aims efforts at energy from biomass</h3>
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            <p><img src="/discoverypark/viewbook/images/delivery/c3bio-impact.gif" class="bordered right" />Liquid transportation fuels are a major component of the U.S. energy sector. A billion tons of lignocellulosic biomass is an annually renewable and carbon-neutral resource of home-grown energy available from U.S. agriculture and forestry. However, for biofuels to contribute strongly in an energy portfolio diversified from dependence on foreign and finite oil, we need to make revolutionary advances in the production efficiencies by which carbon in the biomass can be converted into liquid hydrocarbons and other energy-rich molecules and bio-based products.</p>
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            <p>In C3Bio, we are using recent advances in the science of catalysis, nanotechnology, chemical engineering, materials science, and molecular biology to engineer both the nanoscale properties of biomass materials as well as catalytic conversion pathways. We aim to enable the replacement of oil refineries with next-generation hydrocarbon refineries.  </p>
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            <p><a class="iframe" href="http://www.purdue.edu/discoverypark/c3bio/">Learn More</a></p>
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            <h3>Glytrix, TerraSolutions take top honors at 23rd annual business-plan competition</h3>
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            <p><img src="/discoverypark/viewbook/images/delivery/bp-impact.gif" class="bordered right" />Student-led companies that develop consumer products from the byproducts of ethanol production and a tissue-healing technology that also reduces scarring took top honors at Purdue University's 23rd annual $100,000 Burton D. Morgan Business Plan Competition.</p>
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            <p>Glytrix, which has developed a platform technology for tissue healing and regeneration that also minimizes scarring, received $30,000 for its victory in the Gold Division. The team is led by Joshua Cox, John Paderi, Alyssa Panitch and Kate Stuart.</p>
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            <p>TerraSolutions LLC, led by brothers Jacob and Matthew Smoker of LaPorte, Ind., won the $20,000 top prize in the Black Division for undergraduate students. The company is developing a biodegradable, cork-like material for flooring, insulation and other uses from the waste and byproducts of ethanol production.</p>
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            <p><a class="iframe" href="http://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/students/2010/100224CosierBusinessPlan.html">Learn More</a></p>
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    <h2 class="break">Contact Information By Audience</h2>
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    <p>Contact information at the end of each chapter has been created to direct our audience - students, faculty, partners, and visitors - in their efforts to connect with the right person to discuss areas of potential involvement in Discovery Park activities.  Related Web sites link visitors to programs at Discovery Park.</p>
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    <hr/>
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    <p>The next 8 pages contain contact information.<br/>Please select your next chapter or audience type to continue...</p>
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    <a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/11" class="btn-contact btn-students"><span class="print">Contact Information for Students</span></a>
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    <a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/13" class="btn-contact btn-faculty"><span class="print">Contact Information for Faculty</span></a>
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    <a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/15" class="btn-contact btn-partners"><span class="print">Contact Information for Partners</span></a>
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    <a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/overview/#/page/17" class="btn-contact btn-visitors"><span class="print">Contact Information for Visitors</span></a>
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    <h2>Select Your Next Chapter</h2>
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        <h3>Overview</h3>
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        <p>The Overview chapter offers a glimpse at the unique features, the latest news, building locations and contact information for Discovery Park.</p>
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    <a href="/discoverypark/viewbook/discovery/" class="chapter-select">
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        <h3>Discovery</h3>
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        <p>Learn about how research has been reinvented at Discovery Park, how collaborations among scientists and stakeholders are seeking solutions to grand challenges, and the impacts of discovery.</p>
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        <h3>Delivery</h3>
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        <p>Discovery Park is delivering on Purdue's land-grant mission to serve the people of Indiana and the nation. Large-scale research drives economic development in a knowledge economy and Discovery Park is the engine.</p>
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        <h3>Engagement</h3>
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        <p>Activities at Discovery Park transform people's lives. Undergraduates gain hands-on research experience, business plan competitions nurture a new generation of entrepreneurs, and innovative diagnostic tools detect early stages of disease.</p>
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        <h3>Partnerships</h3>
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        <p>To meet today's grand challenges, a spectrum of partnerships are forming at Discovery Park -- international partners, partnerships with foundations, institutions and industry all contribute to advancing learning and research.</p>
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Latest revision as of 11:37, 18 August 2011



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The Focus

Bacteria can be good or bad. This is the way of saying that bacteria are respectively beneficial or harmful for human beings. Good bacteria have always existed. Some species help humans to digest certain foods, others are important in the production process of, for example, milk, cheese or yogurt. There are even bacterial species that help agriculture by fixating nitrogen for more fertile croplands. This majority of all species are harmless to humans.

Although the bad bacteria are a minority, they are well known. These species can spoil food or make you sick. Take for example ''Salmonella enterica'' that is a natural part of the chicken’s flora. Chickens have no problems with this bacteria strain, but humans can get very sick because of this little brad. Al together we have to respect what they do for us, but have to watch out which bacteria we catch. The iGEM TU Delft want to raise attention for the good bacteria simply because they deserve it!

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