Team:Goettingen/Safety
From 2012.igem.org
Home | Team | Official Team Profile | Project | Parts Submitted to the Registry | Modeling | Notebook | Safety | Attributions |
---|
Language: English, Deutsch
| Safety
1.) Would any of your project ideas raise safety issues in terms of researcher public or environmental safety?
a. If yes, what does your local biosafety group think about your project?Yes, there is a department for security and environmental safety at our university, which comprises a subgroup for genetic engineering. We discussed our project concerning safety issues with two employees and came to the conclusion that our project is compliant to the German Biosafety level 1 guidelines. According to the contact person in the administrative department of industrial safety/environmental protection (view here), there is no risk to harm the population or the environment by our modified organisms. In Germany the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety determines the guidelines for biosafety (click here to be redirected to the homepage of the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety). Furthermore the Federal Office of Justice provides information about the current laws concerning the work in laboratories conducting genetic engineering (view here). We also gathered information about environmental safety in the online guidelines (view here). If particular questions beyond the safety instructions arise we consult the book “Working Safely in Laboratories – Basic principles and Guidelines” edited by the "Deutsche Gesetzliche Unfallversicherung" (DGUV) in 2011 or the homepage of the DGUV (view here). Being students of the University of Göttigen in case of accidents we are covered by an insurance of the "Berufsgenossenschaft Landesunfallskasse Niedersachsen" (view the regulations here). 4.) Do you have any other ideas how to deal with safety issues that could be useful for future iGEM competitions? How could parts, devices and systems be made even safer through biosafety engineering? In general, the organisms utilized in the iGEM competion are not likely to cause harm to the scientists or the environment if released from the laboratory. The major risk factor is an inserted gene that could equip the host with a possible dangerous new ability. It would be beneficial to destroy the organism even after it contaminated the surroundings e.g. through the expression of a “suicide gene”. The possibility of an unwanted expression of a gene could be reduced by using for instance the “double-click mechanism” that was introduced by the iGEM team Chiba in the year 2010 (to be redirected to the homepage of team Chiba 2010 click here). Genetic- and biotechnical-engineering are often viewed by the population as much more dangerous as they actually are, thus a better enlightenment of the public for instance by human practice events (e.g. nationwide Synthetic Biology Day in Germany) would reduce the suspicion and lead to a better trust in such scientific approaches. ↑ Return to top
|