Team:Bard-Annandale/Safety
From 2011.igem.org
1. Would any of your project ideas raise safety issues in terms of:</br>
researcher safety,</br>
public safety, or</br>
environmental safety?</br>
The iGEM 2011 Bard Annandale team takes the issue of safety to its heart. All of our team members have undergone general lab safety training, radiation lab safety training and laser lab safety training. We go through all the details and possible safety issue of our proposed procedure with our team advisers before carrying out any experiment. Our project only involves working with the engineering of non-pathogenic strain of E. Coli. All of our operations on E.Coli are carried out in a disinfected fume hood under the close supervision of our team advisors. All team members wear gloves washed with 70% ethanol solution during the entirety of the experiment. All our bacteria samples are stored in a designated fridge in the lab. All disposable wastes contaminated with E. Coli are stored in a biohazard waste bag and autoclaved before disposal. We believe have taken all the necessary precaution to prevent our project posing any hazard to our health, public safety and the environment.
2. Do any of the new BioBrick parts (or devices) that you made this year raise any safety issues?
All our BioBricks are parts involved with cell-signalling. The signal molecules these parts produce, acyl homoserine lactone and luciferin, pose no health or environmental hazard threat according to MSDS datasheet of the respective compounds. Our proposed design of microfluidic chip is able to trap bacteria tightly in the hydrogel within the device and does not pose any bio hazard threat.<p>