Team:Paris Bettencourt/collaborations
From 2011.igem.org
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<li> <b>D. Lane</b>, from Toulouse II University, who gave us the tetR:YFP and TetO array we biobricked</li> | <li> <b>D. Lane</b>, from Toulouse II University, who gave us the tetR:YFP and TetO array we biobricked</li> | ||
<li> <b>P. Bassereau</b>, from Institut Curie for the ideas she gave us to model the assisted diffusion</li> | <li> <b>P. Bassereau</b>, from Institut Curie for the ideas she gave us to model the assisted diffusion</li> | ||
- | <li> <b>Y. Chai</b>, from Losick Lab (Harvard University) who provided us strains for the biofilm project | + | <li> <b>Y. Chai</b>, from Losick Lab (Harvard University) who provided us strains for the biofilm project</li> |
+ | <li> <b>Y. Chen</b>, </li> | ||
<p style="color:white;">We thank the Opera de Paris for its taste in web designing.</p> | <p style="color:white;">We thank the Opera de Paris for its taste in web designing.</p> | ||
Revision as of 01:52, 29 October 2011
Collaborations
During these past months, we enjoy establishing many interactions with academic labs as well as other iGEM teams.
We deeply believe that iGEM is all about sharing and collaborating with the world, that's why we decided to dedicate a main part of our human practice to scan and analyse all the iGEMs team collaboration within the years... More on our human practice iGEM's collaboration map here.
With iGEMers
Human practice collaborations :
Freiburg - we gave a thorough feedback to Freiburg's team after reviewing their "Oath for Life" project. The point we conveyed to them was about the respect of laws and regulations and the fact that they should mention and may be develop a point about international standards since an oath is valid ''if and only if'' everybody respects it worldwide. We also sent them the ΔEnvZ (E. coli) strain. Some of us have signed the SynBio Oath.
Grenoble - We had a concrete exchange with the Grenoble team, with whom we were in constant contact throughout the past months. They lend us a hand on our Human Practice project by sharing with us their thoughts on the issues we were discussing on regular basis and shared the video of the debate about Synthetic Biology they ran to analyze. This was incorporated into own discussions, summary of which can be found in our human practice section, most notably where ethics is concerned. In parallel, we ran and analyzed the experiment they designed as part of their own Human Practice project.
Fig1: The quiz experiment. Study groups with the leaflet on the left and without on the right
Sharing strains collaborations :
Thanks to the Peking iGEM team, we re-used their 2007 iGEM project result (the push-on push-off system) in our own project. They kindly sent this device to us as well as microbial strains. We are indebted to their team leader for participating to a couple of our reunions at the beginning of our project during his stay in Paris; his ideas helped us moving forward in the different competing projects we had in mind.
Thanks to the Fatih Turkey iGEM team, we shared plasmids and protocol for B. subtilis transformation. We have also rewritten all together the main B. subtilis registry page, curating it for non-functional and mis-assigned BioBricks as well as peer-reviewing the working parts we used.
Our ibpA-mCherry strain were sent to the Dundee iGEM team for a better characterization their sphereactor.
With the world
During the project we established contact with several labs which gave us strains and plasmids. We would like to give special thanks to:
We thank the Opera de Paris for its taste in web designing.