Team:Wisconsin-Madison/outreach

From 2011.igem.org

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Alkane Sensor
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Outreach
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In the production of large chain alkanes for biofuel production, it is crucial for there to be a rapid and accurate diagnostic for comparing production rates in engineered strains of <i>E. coli.</i> To develop an alkane biosensor, <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Wisconsin-Madison/genes">genes</a> from <i>Pseudomonas putida</i> and <i>Alcanivorax borkumensis</i> were isolated and constructed into a pair of <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Wisconsin-Madison/plasmids">plasmids</a> which code for proteins that bind to alkanes and then induce a promoter upstream of a red fluorescent protein. After gathering data at several different concentrations of alkane, a linear regression was produced, allowing for the quantification of an unknown ethanol concentration in a media based upon the level of fluorescence.
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With the exponential advances in technologies enabling biological research such as gene synthesizers and high-throughput ‘-omics’ datasets, reverse engineering of biological function has given way to truly synthetic biology in which the design of novel genetic circuit is possible. Along with these advances, there has been a marked divergence from the Synthetic Biology community and public knowledge pertaining to the capabilities of Synthetic Biology. It is our job as pioneers in this field to maintain integrity, espouse strict ethics, and disseminate an understanding of the inherent societal benefits that synthetic biology can bring to the world. This summer, the UW-Madison iGEM team focused on outreach for youth in our community by presenting a poster and informative game about designing plasmids for biosensors at both the National Science Olympiad for middle and high school students as well as a summer science camp for elementary school students.
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Learn more about: <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Wisconsin-Madison/genes">genes</a>
Learn more about: <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Wisconsin-Madison/genes">genes</a>

Revision as of 05:42, 22 September 2011









Outreach >> Science Olympiad, REU Poster Session, Social Media, Presentations

Outreach

With the exponential advances in technologies enabling biological research such as gene synthesizers and high-throughput ‘-omics’ datasets, reverse engineering of biological function has given way to truly synthetic biology in which the design of novel genetic circuit is possible. Along with these advances, there has been a marked divergence from the Synthetic Biology community and public knowledge pertaining to the capabilities of Synthetic Biology. It is our job as pioneers in this field to maintain integrity, espouse strict ethics, and disseminate an understanding of the inherent societal benefits that synthetic biology can bring to the world. This summer, the UW-Madison iGEM team focused on outreach for youth in our community by presenting a poster and informative game about designing plasmids for biosensors at both the National Science Olympiad for middle and high school students as well as a summer science camp for elementary school students.


Learn more about: genes