Team:BostonU/DataSheet

From 2012.igem.org

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Our approach to sharing characterization data through a data sheet is to break information into three major sections: ''Growth/Measurement Conditions'', ''Part Information'' and ''Data Analysis''.
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Our approach to sharing characterization data through a data sheet is to break information into four major sections: <i> General Datasheet Information</i>, <i>Growth/Measurement Conditions</i>, <i>Part Information</i> and <i>Data Analysis</i>.
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<b>General Datasheet Information:</b>
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<b>Growth/Measurement Conditions:</b> In this section of the datasheet, all of the experimental growth conditions and measurement settings are recorded.
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·        Experimental conditions (include controls used) – similar to paper methods, repeatable part
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·        If fluorescence used – microscopy, flow data, plate reading
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·        Abstract included
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Requirements for the Data Sheet / Device Summary
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·        Device name
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·        Abstract
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·        Author – Assembler and the Experimentalist
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·        Date
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·        Affiliation
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·        Part names (no sequence data)
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·        Assembly graph – include assembly technique, initials of person who built it
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·        Protocol graph name / reference
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·        Assembly confirmation – gel (image?) and seq info (not the full seq, just if it has been seq’ed and if it’s correct; text, no image)
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·        Comments – include any conclusions drawn, etc.
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·        Figure legends for all images used
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·        Pieces are only for human consumption, but we’re working on making them consumable with a computer program
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·        References and Links section for external information
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·        Related Parts / Experiments / Data Sheets
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Revision as of 23:40, 2 October 2012

BostonU iGEM Team: Welcome


Data Sheet




An Introduction to Data Sheets

    In other fields of engineering, such as electrical engineering, data sheets are a way to document part data such that the behavior of the part is captured and can be shared with other groups. Ideally, the information on these sheets are robust enough to allow any group to use the part in a different context effectively, given the information captured on these data sheets.


    Canton et al. 2008                                                           Arkin 2008

    Several groups have started developing the ideas that should be on such a data sheet for DNA parts. Canton et. al included information such as performance, reliability and compatibility. Arkin suggested that general device data, cell-cell communication measurements, DNA-binding protein domain measurements and therapeutic measurements could be made in also. A sharing standard is sought, but there is still no standard mechanism for sharing part information amongst synthetic biologists.

Our Approach

    Our approach to sharing characterization data through a data sheet is to break information into four major sections: General Datasheet Information, Growth/Measurement Conditions, Part Information and Data Analysis.

    General Datasheet Information:
    Growth/Measurement Conditions: In this section of the datasheet, all of the experimental growth conditions and measurement settings are recorded. · Experimental conditions (include controls used) – similar to paper methods, repeatable part · If fluorescence used – microscopy, flow data, plate reading · Abstract included Requirements for the Data Sheet / Device Summary · Device name · Abstract · Author – Assembler and the Experimentalist · Date · Affiliation · Part names (no sequence data) · Assembly graph – include assembly technique, initials of person who built it · Protocol graph name / reference · Assembly confirmation – gel (image?) and seq info (not the full seq, just if it has been seq’ed and if it’s correct; text, no image) · Comments – include any conclusions drawn, etc. · Figure legends for all images used · Pieces are only for human consumption, but we’re working on making them consumable with a computer program · References and Links section for external information · Related Parts / Experiments / Data Sheets

    [1] B. Canton et al. “Refinement and standardization...” Nature Biotech 26(7). 2008.
    [2] A. Arkin "Setting the standard in synthetic biology" Nature Biotech 26(7). 2008.