Team:Exeter/Applications

From 2012.igem.org

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         The medical applications of custom made polysaccharides are vast, ranging from improved drug delivery to antiseptic wound gel. Perhaps the greatest benefit would be in vaccine use. Polysaccharide-based vaccines (either normal or conjugated to a protein) are a vaccine subunit and provide effective immunity to diseases such as Haemophilus influenzae type b. The ability to produce novel polysaccharides quickly could lead to very fast vaccine production in the case of an epidemic. Vaccine types could be 'stored' and then, in effect 'grown' in a lab for rapid dispatch.
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         The medical applications of custom made polysaccharides are vast, ranging from improved drug delivery to antiseptic wound gel. Perhaps the greatest benefit would be in vaccine use. Polysaccharide-based vaccines (either normal or conjugated to a protein) are a vaccine subunit and provide effective immunity to diseases such as Haemophilus influenza type b. The ability to produce novel polysaccharides quickly could lead to very fast vaccine production in the case of an epidemic. Vaccine types could be 'stored' and then, in effect 'grown' in a lab for rapid dispatch.
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Revision as of 09:09, 25 July 2012

The question:'Why?' is often asked when conducting a scientific experiment. On this page we aim to explain how we envisage our polysaccharides could be used in the future, and thus why it was the winning idea for the Exeter iGEM team.