Team:Queens Canada/tour2

From 2011.igem.org

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<h3green> Biodegradation Mechanism <p></h3green><p>
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<regulartext> Meet <span class="classgreent"><a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Queens_Canada/Intro/Team">the team </a><span>,  inspiring <span class="classgreent"><a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Queens_Canada/Intro/Team">Faculty Advisors</a><span>, or check out <span class="classgreent"><a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Queens_Canada/Intro/Photos">photos </a><span>from the summer! </regulartext> <p>
 
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Revision as of 13:42, 28 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.

To see where we came from and other possible summer projects, check out our brainstorming sessions section.

Bioremediation Toolkit

Discover why our team choose to examine the environmental concerns of contamination in soils with in our rationale section. Browse our main project goal or take a look at

Transgenic Chemotaxis

As the principal goal of our project, modifying the worm's normal chemotaxis mechanism to increase it's affinity for toxic chemicals was completed through creating genetic constructs to inject C. elegans worms.

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

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

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 modular components to the iGEM parts registry. For future iGEM teams, we also included a few intermediate constructs to build from.

Take a look at our featured parts of 2011 and novel assembly method for synthetic biologists.