Team:Hong Kong-CUHK/2.2.1
From 2012.igem.org
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CH2.2.1 - FOOD & ENERGY βCan biotechnology be responsibly used to produce food or energy without causing widespread shortages of either, and without harming the environment that future generations will inherit?β Example for food: iGarden is a toolkit that lets one to grow a personalized garden: 1. Knockdown of plant allergens to make safer foods 2. Novel flavors for nutritious foods to be more favorable 3. Modification of plant metabolism to color the white petals Plants are modified through several steps. All constructs were made in bacteria, and once complete, they were being cloned into the BioBrick agrobacterium vectors. Bacteria were then transformed with the constructs via electroporation, and flowers were dipped into the transgenic bacteria. In the final step the transformed seeds were harvested and screened for the designed constructs using antibiotic selection. Specific Human Practice of iGarden: "Genetic fence" is designed specifically for these plants to grow within the area the gardener prefers. Plants can only grow inside the genetic fence but not outside of the fence. Hence, the genetically modified seeds will not be released and neither its modified genes. Source: https://2010.igem.org/Team:Harvard/vectors Example for Energy: Several kinds of renewable resources have been developed to generate electricity, but the efficiency of the energy production from these resources is very low compared to the non-renewable ones. During cheese production, a by-product called whey is produced, and whey disposal is a problem to creameries as it causes water pollution. Even though microorganisms do not naturally have an efficient pathway of both lactose-cleaving and ethanol-producing, synthetic biologists designed a novel pathways from the nature, selected the powerful enzymes and combined the genes of each essential component to produce a new microorganism that gives the highest yield of ethanol from lactose |
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