Team:WITS-CSIR SA/Project/Abstract
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- | <p>We have focused on one aspect of this network: the directed transport of the message-carrying “communication modules” within our biological network. These communication modules will take the form of bacteria, which can move over physical distances carrying information. The content of the message - designed to elicit a desired output - is, of course, vital to the eventual application. However, the successful delivery and transport of these messages to other effector bacteria - dictating the end-points of the data network - is of vital importance for proof of concept. Thus, we will attempt to engineer the exogenously controlled chemotactic behaviour of bacteria using synthetic riboswitches to regulate the expression of a protein required for bacterial motility. This will allow for their directed movement towards a desired location where they can deliver the message: a biological analogy to the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) of the Internet.</p> | + | <p>We have focused on one aspect of this network: the directed transport of the message-carrying “communication modules” within our biological network. These communication modules will take the form of bacteria, which can move over physical distances carrying information. The content of the message - designed to elicit a desired output - is, of course, vital to the eventual application. However, the successful delivery and transport of these messages to other effector bacteria - dictating the end-points of the data network - is of vital importance for proof of concept. Thus, we will attempt to engineer the exogenously controlled chemotactic behaviour of bacteria using synthetic riboswitches to regulate the expression of a protein required for bacterial motility. This will allow for their directed movement towards a desired location where they can deliver the message: a biological analogy to the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) of the Internet, which delivered the data to your computer allowing you to read this abstract.</p> |
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Revision as of 13:10, 15 July 2011