Team:Stanford-Brown
From 2012.igem.org
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<li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/Biomining/Harvesting">Improved part BBa_K133038 from Slovenia 2008 by standardizing ligation into flagella and engineered the <i>E. coli</i> flagellum to extract metals <i>in situ</i></a></li> | <li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/Biomining/Harvesting">Improved part BBa_K133038 from Slovenia 2008 by standardizing ligation into flagella and engineered the <i>E. coli</i> flagellum to extract metals <i>in situ</i></a></li> | ||
<li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/VenusLife/Modeling">Modeled bacterial growth in the Venusian atmosphere </a></li> | <li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/VenusLife/Modeling">Modeled bacterial growth in the Venusian atmosphere </a></li> | ||
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<li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/HumanPractices/Introduction">Wrote Guides to Bioethics and Gene Patent Law for smoother navigation of the moral and legal aspects of synthetic biology </a></li> | <li> <a href="/Team:Stanford-Brown/HumanPractices/Introduction">Wrote Guides to Bioethics and Gene Patent Law for smoother navigation of the moral and legal aspects of synthetic biology </a></li> | ||
<li> <a href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/08/engineering-bacteria-for-mars/">Featured in Wired Magazine </a></li> | <li> <a href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/08/engineering-bacteria-for-mars/">Featured in Wired Magazine </a></li> |
Revision as of 03:48, 4 October 2012
ABSTRACT
Astrobiology revolves around three central questions: "Where do we come from?", "Where are we going?", and "Are we alone?" The Stanford-Brown iGEM team explored synthetic biology's untapped potential to address these questions. To approach the second question, the Hell Cell subgroup developed BioBricks that allow a cell to survive harsh extraterrestrial conditions. Such a toolset could create a space-ready synthetic organism to perform useful functions off-world. For example, the Biomining branch attempted to engineer bacteria to recycle used electronics by degenerating silica and extracting metal ions in situ. The Venus Life subproject grappled with the third key astrobiological question by exploring Carl Sagan's theory that life could exist in Venusian clouds. To this end, Venus Life designed a cell-cycle reporter to test for growth in aerosol within an adapted Millikan apparatus. Through this triad of projects, Stanford-Brown iGEM aims to illuminate synthetic biology's value as a tool for astrobiology. |
ACCOMPLISHMENTS
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