Team:Groningen

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=<center>Welcome to the iGEM 2011 Groningen team page</center>=
=<center>Welcome to the iGEM 2011 Groningen team page</center>=
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==Count coli - a synthetic biological counter==
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<a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Groningen/team_overview" onMouseOver="document.groupphoto.src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/4/45/TeamGroningenPhoto2.jpg';" onMouseOut="document.groupphoto.src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/3/37/TeamGroningenPhoto3.jpg';">
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<center>'''Our team is based at the University of Groningen in the The Netherlands'''</center>
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<html><center><div style="width: 500px; text-align: justify">Our project aims to design a genetic device able to count and memorize the occurrences of an input signal. We achieved this by utilizing auto-inducing loops that act as memory units, and an engineered riboregulator acting as an AND gate. This design of the device is modular allowing free change of both input and output signals. Each increase of the counter results in a different output signal. The design allows implementation of any number of memory units, as the AND gate design enables us to extend the system in a hassle-free way. In order to tweak bistable autoinducing loops we needed a very fast and robust method for characterizing parts. For this we have created a cloud based application hosting a genetic algorithm. It also allows the combination of data from multiple experiments across models with overlapping components. This functionality, massively parallelized on the cloud and backed by our own pool of clients, allowed us to find parameters of the parts used in the design.
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==Our project==
 
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[[File:GroningenComic.png|thumb|center|700px|A comic illustrating how our designed biological counter work. As you can clearly see, the bacteria counts the number of cold shocks occurrence. For each count, the bacteria displays a different output - green and red fluorescence.]]
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'''Our engineered biological abacus counts occurrences of cold shocks.'''
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[[Team:Groningen/project|Read more about our project!]]
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[[File:GroningenComic.png|center|500px|]]
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[[Team:Groningen/modeling_cumulus|Read more about modeling!]]
 
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<center>'''Our team is based at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands'''</center>
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==Contact information:==
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[mailto:team@igemgroningen.com team@igemgroningen.com]
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<a href="https://2011.igem.org/Team:Groningen/team_overview" onMouseOver="document.groupphoto.src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/4/45/TeamGroningenPhoto2.jpg';" onMouseOut="document.groupphoto.src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/3/37/TeamGroningenPhoto3.jpg';">
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<img style="margin: auto; border: 0px double black;" name="groupphoto" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2011/3/37/TeamGroningenPhoto3.jpg" ></a></div>
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<center>(hover your cursor over our team picture for a friendly hello)</center>
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Latest revision as of 08:58, 28 October 2011


Welcome to the iGEM 2011 Groningen team page

Count coli - a synthetic biological counter

Our project aims to design a genetic device able to count and memorize the occurrences of an input signal. We achieved this by utilizing auto-inducing loops that act as memory units, and an engineered riboregulator acting as an AND gate. This design of the device is modular allowing free change of both input and output signals. Each increase of the counter results in a different output signal. The design allows implementation of any number of memory units, as the AND gate design enables us to extend the system in a hassle-free way. In order to tweak bistable autoinducing loops we needed a very fast and robust method for characterizing parts. For this we have created a cloud based application hosting a genetic algorithm. It also allows the combination of data from multiple experiments across models with overlapping components. This functionality, massively parallelized on the cloud and backed by our own pool of clients, allowed us to find parameters of the parts used in the design.


Our engineered biological abacus counts occurrences of cold shocks.

GroningenComic.png


Our team is based at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands

(hover your cursor over our team picture for a friendly hello)