Team:University College London/Notebook/Week1
From 2012.igem.org
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<div class="notebook-training"> '''Training - Talk on Team Management''' - Elena Pallari, participant in the UCL team of 2010, advised us about managing an iGEM team efficiently, and offered to hold weekly meetings to support us as we progress.</div> | <div class="notebook-training"> '''Training - Talk on Team Management''' - Elena Pallari, participant in the UCL team of 2010, advised us about managing an iGEM team efficiently, and offered to hold weekly meetings to support us as we progress.</div> | ||
- | <div class="notebook- | + | <div class="notebook-brainstorm">'''Meeting – Reviewing Biobrick Construction.''' The team met with our supervisor Darren Nesbeth for further discussion of biobrick construction and, importantly, to narrow down the selection of names for our project. A vote identified three popular names – Plastic Republic, Syntopia and Biotopia. A poll was set up on our facebook to see which was most popular with our facebook followers.</div> |
==Tuesday 12th June == | ==Tuesday 12th June == | ||
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<div class="notebook-news">'''Press Team Meeting – What Should a Press Kit Contain?''' The team met to discuss how we can convey our project to the Press – in particular whether it would be best to place the focus on the problem of microplastics, or the concept of an island as a solution for this problem. For the press release, and for our other forms of media, we have decided to focus on the island. Though an ‘island’ it is an illusory endpoint to our project – it is highly visible, and will foo idea that synthetic biology can be used to improve the state of the planet. </div> | <div class="notebook-news">'''Press Team Meeting – What Should a Press Kit Contain?''' The team met to discuss how we can convey our project to the Press – in particular whether it would be best to place the focus on the problem of microplastics, or the concept of an island as a solution for this problem. For the press release, and for our other forms of media, we have decided to focus on the island. Though an ‘island’ it is an illusory endpoint to our project – it is highly visible, and will foo idea that synthetic biology can be used to improve the state of the planet. </div> | ||
- | <div class="notebook- | + | <div class="notebook-meeting">'''Construction Crew Meeting – Conjugation.''' The Construction Crew continued their search for a way to prevent conjugation. They discussed ‘geneageddon’ - a theoretical biobrick enabling bacteria to secrete nucleases, which will digest any plasmids released during cell lysis. Also, they considered using the Imperial iGEM 2011 toxin/antitoxin system to prevent gene transfer by conjugation. Our GMO would carry a toxin gene on its plasmids and an antitoxin gene on its chromosomal DNA. Upon conjugation, only the toxin gene would be delivered to the wild-type recipient, and so any conjugation between GMO and wild-type would be lethal for the wild-type. Spread of genetically modified DNA would therefore be prevented. In particular, we aim to combine these genes on a single plasmid, and therefore improve the Imperial biobrick.</div> |
<div class="notebook-wetlab">''' Training - Wet Lab.''' We were trained to use various equipment around the lab, and how to make important solutions for our experiments. In particular, we were trained to carry out a restriction enzyme digest, and how to inoculate bacteria.</div> | <div class="notebook-wetlab">''' Training - Wet Lab.''' We were trained to use various equipment around the lab, and how to make important solutions for our experiments. In particular, we were trained to carry out a restriction enzyme digest, and how to inoculate bacteria.</div> | ||
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<div class="notebook-achievement">'''Achievement.''' The team also recieved the great news that our proposal for the Rathenau Debate has been accepted.</div> | <div class="notebook-achievement">'''Achievement.''' The team also recieved the great news that our proposal for the Rathenau Debate has been accepted.</div> | ||
- | <div class="notebook- | + | <div class="notebook-brainstorm"> '''Meeting -Construction.''' The Construction Crew worked hard all afternoon to produce a final document of all the biobrick circuits.</div> |
== Reflections == | == Reflections == |
Latest revision as of 18:47, 26 September 2012
Contents |
Notebook: Week 1
Preparations | Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 | Week 12 | Week 13 | Week 14 | Week 15 | Week 16
Aims For This Week
In the upcoming week we will be learning the skills to implement the many ideas we have generated over the last few months. This includes a tight schedule of exciting talks by advisors from various fields, to inform us about various topics relating to our project, and lab-training in the UCL’s Advanced Centre for Biochemical Engineering (ACBE). We hope that by the end of the week we will gain the skills to begin our lab-work, and will have some guidance from our advisors as to how best to proceed. In particular, we look forward to meeting Paola Gomez-Pereira – a specialist in marine microbiology from the National Oceanographic Centre at Southampton University.
Monday 11th June
Tuesday 12th June
Wednesday 13th June
Thursday 14th June
Friday 15th June
Reflections
We survived training week! This week we've had a lot of informative and insightful training lectures and workshops and we are now ready to go. We have talked to some great advisors who will help guide our project, and we are particularly excited about using roseobacterium - a marine bacterium Paola (our fantastic advisors on all-things-ocean from Southampton) suggested as a chassis.
End of week: Construction plans finalised, wiki started - Week 2 can come.
Friday evening update: The Rathenau Institute accepted our debate proposal for the "Meeting of Young Minds". Yay!