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Revision as of 05:33, 23 September 2011

Queen's
Our Summer Project

This summer we engineered the nematode worm C. elegans to build a bioremediation toolkit.

To get a quick overview of our project, take a look of the video to the right where Adrian, Stephanie, Tony and Allister give a rundown of the summer objectives.

Why Bioremediation?

The International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) team at Queen's University is called QGEM, composed of a group of undergraduate students from Kingston, Canada.

We spent the summer in the lab working on the nematode worm C. elegans to create a bioremediation toolkit.

Meet the team , inspiring Faculty Advisors, or check out photos from the summer!

Transgenic Chemotaxis

As the principal goal of our project, modifying the worm's normal chemotaxis mechanism to increase it's

A breakdown of the findings can be found on the results page, while the video gallery offers a glimpse of our worms in action

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Reporter System

The International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) team at Queen's University is called QGEM, composed of a group of undergraduate students from Kingston, Canada.

We spent the summer in the lab working on the nematode worm C. elegans to create a bioremediation toolkit.

Meet the team , inspiring Faculty Advisors, or check out photos from the summer!

Biodegradation Mechanism

In addition to moving towards the target pollutants, our or

Meet the team , inspiring Faculty Advisors, or check out photos from the summer!

Use our Parts

All of our parts are available to be used in your future synthetic biology project. We created x composite constructs and submitted y components to the iGEM parts registry.

Take a look at our featured parts of 2011 and new software tool for synthetic biologists.