Team:Paris Bettencourt
From 2011.igem.org
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
<td style="width:200px;"><center><a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Project"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/8/86/Logo_projet.png" alt="our logo" width="150px"></a></center></td> | <td style="width:200px;"><center><a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Project"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/8/86/Logo_projet.png" alt="our logo" width="150px"></a></center></td> | ||
<td id="presentation_txt" style="width:730px;position:relative;top:30%"> | <td id="presentation_txt" style="width:730px;position:relative;top:30%"> | ||
- | <p><b><p><i><u>The project:</u></i> We bet-hedged our chances using different reporter systems by creating several devices relying on protein or RNA diffusion. Our devices rely on an emitter cell and a receiver cell that amplifies the signal. We chose to work with signaling molecules of different sizes and natures to test thoroughly the diffusion possibilities. Experiments were coupled with a thorough modeling approach tackling both the detection devices as well as diffusion, assisted transfer within the tubes and the membrane fusion within.</b></p> | + | <p><b><p><i><u>The project:</u></i> We bet-hedged our chances using different reporter systems by creating <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Designs">several devices</a> relying on protein or RNA diffusion. Our devices rely on an emitter cell and a receiver cell that amplifies the signal. We chose to work with signaling molecules of different sizes and natures to test thoroughly the diffusion possibilities. Experiments were coupled with a <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Modeling">thorough modeling</a> approach tackling both the detection devices as well as diffusion, <a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Paris_Bettencourt/Modeling/Assisted_diffusion">assisted transfer</a> within the tubes and the membrane fusion within.</b></p> |
<br /> | <br /> | ||
</td> | </td> |
Revision as of 00:19, 22 September 2011
Using synthetic biology to investigate newly discovered biological phenomena
The interest: A recent ground-breaking paper [1] described a new cell-to-cell bacterial communication system: nanotubes. Through excellent electronic microscopy images, antibiotic resistance transfer and faint fluorescence transfer , and cross-antibiotic resistance, previously unknown exchange channels were revealed between B.subtilis cells and even between completely different species. Results suggest that protein and/or RNA can travel through these tubes. This discovery may lead to a redefinition of individuality in bacteria. Given the many applications of known communication systems (e.g., quorum sensing, conjugation) in synthetic biology, harnessing the capacity of the nanotubes will open endless possibilities for new applications as amorph computing....
The challenge: Using synthetic biology to characterize the nanotubes, the structure, composition and control of which are still unknown. We decided to work on this challenging problem by providing other proofs to support this discovery.
See our work!
The project: We bet-hedged our chances using different reporter systems by creating several devices relying on protein or RNA diffusion. Our devices rely on an emitter cell and a receiver cell that amplifies the signal. We chose to work with signaling molecules of different sizes and natures to test thoroughly the diffusion possibilities. Experiments were coupled with a thorough modeling approach tackling both the detection devices as well as diffusion, assisted transfer within the tubes and the membrane fusion within. |
|
The Team:
We are fifteen students from parisian universities coming from many different disciplines who came together to participate in the iGEM competition. Come and meet the Team. |
|
The values:
Ethics and safety are two main concerns when building genetically engineered organisms. You can visit our Human practice work and our safety page. |
Achievements
List of all our achievements during the summer:
- Reproduced the GFP experiment of the original paper
- Reproduced the antibiotic experiment of the original paper and proposed an alternative explanation for the results
References
- Intercellular Nanotubes Mediate Bacterial Communication, Dubey and Ben-Yehuda, Cell, available here