Team:Queens Canada/Safety/Lab
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<regulartext> As a machine designed to chemotax toward toxic compounds, our organism poses little threat to the environment. On the contrary, our organism could prove beneficial to the environment if we succeed in getting it to degrade naphthalene. By extension, our organism could also prove beneficial to human health. We feel it is unlikely that a mutation in any of our biobricks would result in harm to humans or the environment. Mutations in our biobricks would lead to deactivation of our imported GPCRs, and we would not expect this to alter the ability of the worm to survive and out-compete other organisms. Overall, <i>C. elegans</i> can be considered safer than <i>E. coli</i>, the standard synthetic biology chassis, because the worm is not capable of horizontal gene transfer. </regulartext> | <regulartext> As a machine designed to chemotax toward toxic compounds, our organism poses little threat to the environment. On the contrary, our organism could prove beneficial to the environment if we succeed in getting it to degrade naphthalene. By extension, our organism could also prove beneficial to human health. We feel it is unlikely that a mutation in any of our biobricks would result in harm to humans or the environment. Mutations in our biobricks would lead to deactivation of our imported GPCRs, and we would not expect this to alter the ability of the worm to survive and out-compete other organisms. Overall, <i>C. elegans</i> can be considered safer than <i>E. coli</i>, the standard synthetic biology chassis, because the worm is not capable of horizontal gene transfer. </regulartext> | ||
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- | <regulartext> Drs. Ian Chin-Sang and Kenton Ko are two of the team’s Faculty Advisors this year, and have provided the team with lab space in which we conduct all of our wet work. They are both members of the Queen’s Biohazards Committee and have ensured that we work within the appropriate biosafety regulations. Furthermore, all of our team members have undergone WHMIS and | + | <regulartext> Drs. Ian Chin-Sang and Kenton Ko are two of the team’s Faculty Advisors this year, and have provided the team with lab space in which we conduct all of our wet work. They are both members of the Queen’s Biohazards Committee and have ensured that we work within the appropriate biosafety regulations. Furthermore, all of our team members have undergone WHMIS and radiation safety training. Safety is one of our top priorities. |
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Revision as of 19:06, 28 September 2011