Team:Uppsala University/Safety
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<b>1. Would any of your project ideas raise safety issues in terms o: researcher saety, public saftey or enviromental safety?</b><br> | <b>1. Would any of your project ideas raise safety issues in terms o: researcher saety, public saftey or enviromental safety?</b><br> | ||
<br>There is no risk to the safety or the health of team members or others in the lab. Neither our material, nor our constructs produce anything toxic. We use E. coli Top10 strain as cloning strain, which has very low fitness outside the lab. We are also working with the E. coli MG1655 strain, which is a wild type, non-pathogenic lab strain and it won’t be competitive enough outside the lab environment to survive. All strains that we come in contact with are classified as WHO risk group 1 (no or low individual and community risk), i.e. microorganisms that are unlikely to cause human or animal disease. | <br>There is no risk to the safety or the health of team members or others in the lab. Neither our material, nor our constructs produce anything toxic. We use E. coli Top10 strain as cloning strain, which has very low fitness outside the lab. We are also working with the E. coli MG1655 strain, which is a wild type, non-pathogenic lab strain and it won’t be competitive enough outside the lab environment to survive. All strains that we come in contact with are classified as WHO risk group 1 (no or low individual and community risk), i.e. microorganisms that are unlikely to cause human or animal disease. | ||
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<br>The research that we are making provides us with basic information such as how to target microbial resistance genes. In the beginning of the project we were provided with real case ESBL genes, CTX-M-15, AAC(6´) and TetA, isolated from clinical isolates. These genes were isolated by researchers at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology and in accordance to Swedish safety practice. The genes were provided to us as single genes in a standard synthetic biology plasmid in an E. Coli TOP10 strain. In our project we have been working with these genes, but never with the wild-type clinical strains, nor the wild-type ESBL plasmid. Our final constructs will be in both MG1655 and the TOP10 strains. | <br>The research that we are making provides us with basic information such as how to target microbial resistance genes. In the beginning of the project we were provided with real case ESBL genes, CTX-M-15, AAC(6´) and TetA, isolated from clinical isolates. These genes were isolated by researchers at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology and in accordance to Swedish safety practice. The genes were provided to us as single genes in a standard synthetic biology plasmid in an E. Coli TOP10 strain. In our project we have been working with these genes, but never with the wild-type clinical strains, nor the wild-type ESBL plasmid. Our final constructs will be in both MG1655 and the TOP10 strains. | ||
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Revision as of 14:41, 7 September 2012
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1. Would any of your project ideas raise safety issues in terms o: researcher saety, public saftey or enviromental safety? |