Team:University College London/Notebook/Week3
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Contents |
Notebook: Week 3
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
This week we will be presenting our progress in all aspects of the project to our supervisors, but our key aim is to demonstrate that we have progressed sufficiently to begin construction.
Monday
Training – Wet lab Today four of us (James Rutley, Bethan Wolfenden, Bouran Sohrabi, Philipp Boeing) had a training on how to make competent cells which was organized by one of our iGEM advisers - Alex Templar. We completed one out of three training stages which was making minimal media and plating out our E.coli cells. This will lead onto the second stage (tomorrow) which involves the inoculation of colonies.
Meeting – Construction/Characterisation Today we had a construction/characterization meeting with our main supervisor Darren Nesbeth. The outcome of the meeting was the finalisation of five modules which are Aggregation, Salt Tolerance, Degradation, Buoyancy, and Containment (the receptor module was included into the aggregation module). Tac promoters were chosen for the degradation and salt tolerance module biobricks in case any toxicity is present.
This meeting made our wet lab plan more solid, which will allow us to start working on our first module (aggregation) in the upcoming week. Work begins on finalising detailed construction and characterisation plans. Preliminary biobricks are added to the registry.
Tuesday
Achievement - Wet Lab! Our team is proud to announce that our first biobrick ‘Temperature regulated Gas Vesicle Polycistronic gene cluster composite’ is up on the registry and can be find at the following link: http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K729000 Second piece of good news is that Prof John Ward (one of our iGEM advisors) has agreed to provide us the following organisms: Deinococcus radiodurans (required for salt tolerance module) as well as numerousRhodococcus strains.
Having an access to these organisms assures that we are on our way of being fully prepared for the construction of degradation and salt tolerance modules.
Training – Wet lab Today we (Bethan Wolfenden, Aurelija Grigonyte, James Rutley, Bouran Sohrabi) continued on our training on how to make competent cells. We inoculated colonies from four different plates. After adding our colonies into LB medium we left them incubated in shaker overnight (at 37˚C). This will lead to the third and last stage of preparation of competent cells that we are going to complete tomorrow.
Sponsorship - Sponsume [http://www.sponsume.com/project/plastic-republic Launched our Crowdfunding campaign on Sponsume]. Our main target: half of our project costs, £15,000.
Meeting - Modelling. Erin and Tom met to work on modelling plastic particles in the North Pacific Gyre using MATLAB software. Outcome: They completed their first draft, which can be used as a base for the full simulation.
Wednesday
Meeting – Human Practice. Meeting arranged by our supervisor Darren to analyse the progress of our Human Practice plans, and especially how they will be presented on the wiki. Outcome: Targeted the need to create a timetable for the architectural rendering of our island – which will be a key feature of the wiki. We also highlighted the need to find ways of demonstrating everything we do in an appropriate way. This will require further brainstorming.
Achievement – Lush Article. An article written by Martina regarding the relevance of our project to the cosmetics industry was published on the Lush website. Lush is a company which produces and sells environmentally-friendly cosmetic products, but also makes a large effort to raise awareness about these issues. This is relevant to our project, because some of the microplastic contribution to the oceanic pollution comes from ‘run-off’ plastics – for example microplastics found in exfoliators, make-up and other products. We feel publishing this article was an important action as it put our message out to a community that is not necessarily of a scientific background, but who may be inspired by its relevance to their values. Outcome: Gain of publicity, and created an interface that will attract a new and very different audience, who may not necessarily find out about our research otherwise
Thursday
Meeting – Beacon Bursary Application. Martina arranged to meet with Hillary Jackson from UCL’s Public Engagement Unit to discuss the Beacon Bursary application to fund our DIYbio project. Outcome: A few minor changes were necessary but we felt confident in our application. This is an important application because it should help us put up a public lab with Biohackers
Social - BBQ
Friday
Achievements - Registry. For a summary of our biobricks so far, check out the registry at http://partsregistry.org/cgi/partsdb/pgroup.cgi?pgroup=iGEM2012&group=University_College_London
Reflections
We are all very encouraged, now that we have now reached the position where we can go into the lab and begin the experimental work - which has been scheduled for next week. Similarly, the modelling team have much of the information required to start the basis of their models. This means next week should be really active in terms of starting practical work.
Success of the Week: Loading our Biobricks onto the Registry