Team:LMU-Munich/Application

From 2012.igem.org

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The excessive use of disposable plastic and the lack of universal recycling programs has led to the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22610295 pollution of the world's oceans]. In the ocean, large pieces of Polystyrene litter are ground by sea currents into very small pieces, so called plastic plankton, that are consumed by fish, filter feeders, and other organisms living in the oceans. Such plastic uptake can lead to poisoning, sterility and death. The [http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php/Part:BBa_I728500 CPX-peptide] can bind to Polystyrene and was generated by the iGEM team from MIT (2007). CPX-'''Sporo'''beads in huge filter boxes could be put into place to mechanically filter microscopic plastic particles, like Polystyrene plankton, out of the water. To prevent the beads from being released into the sea and to ensure the plastic be removed from the water, the '''Sporo'''beads could be attached to membranes in the boxes. Then the '''Sporo'''beads would need to not only display CPX but also a membrane binding protein on their surface. [for security information see [https://2012.igem.org/Team:LMU-Munich/Project_Safety release for application]
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The excessive use of disposable plastic and the lack of universal recycling programs has led to the [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22610295 pollution of the world's oceans]. In the ocean, large pieces of Polystyrene litter are ground by sea currents and degraded by UV radiation into very small pieces, so called "plastic plankton," which is consumed by fish, filter feeders, and other marine organisms. Such plastic uptake can lead to poisoning, sterility and death. The [http://partsregistry.org/wiki/index.php/Part:BBa_I728500 CPX-peptide], created by the 2007 MIT iGEM team, can bind to Polystyrene. CPX-'''Sporo'''beads in huge filter boxes could be put into place to mechanically filter microscopic plastic particles, like Polystyrene microparticles, out of the water. Such specific filtration would be superior to blanket filtration systems, which also remove living phytoplankton important to ocean ecosystems. To prevent the beads from being released into the sea and to ensure the plastic be removed from the water, the '''Sporo'''beads could be attached to membranes in the filter boxes. Then the '''Sporo'''beads would need to not only display CPX but also a membrane binding protein on their surface. [for security information see [https://2012.igem.org/Team:LMU-Munich/Project_Safety release for application]]
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Revision as of 11:51, 22 October 2012

iGEM Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Beadzillus

Team-LMU Photo2.jpg

The LMU-Munich team is exuberantly happy about the great success at the World Championship Jamboree in Boston. Our project Beadzillus finished 4th and won the prize for the "Best Wiki" (with Slovenia) and "Best New Application Project".

IGEM HQ LMU prize.jpg

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