Difference between revisions of "Team:Macquarie Australia/Collaborations"

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<p>On each occasion, all three teams delivered presentations detailing their project aims progress-to-date. These presentations were followed by questions, feedback and collaboration discussions which proved highly fruitful for all three teams.</p>
 
<p>On each occasion, all three teams delivered presentations detailing their project aims progress-to-date. These presentations were followed by questions, feedback and collaboration discussions which proved highly fruitful for all three teams.</p>
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<figure class="specialInline"><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/1/1e/Australia_meetup.jpg" width="414px"></a></figure>
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  <figcaption><center>Fig2. The Australian iGEM Meet-up </figcaption>
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Revision as of 07:08, 17 September 2015

Collaborations
Link to Practices page
Link to Chlorophyll Mythbusters page
Link to Implementation Strategy page
Link to Internship page
Link to So You Think You Can Synthesise page
Link to Macquarie University Open Day page
Collaborations page
Link to Meetups page

Collaborations

INSERT COLLABORATION BADGES HERE; two rows of five

This year’s Macquarie University iGEM team collaborated successfully with teams from 10 other universities. In doing so, we enhanced our own outreach activities as well as assisting other teams to reach their goals - with regards to the scientific completion of both their projects and their human practice goals.

The iGEM teams representing University of Sydney, Linköping University, Birbeck University and Oxford University directly took part in an episode of the world’s first synthetic biology themed gameshow, So You Think You Can Synthesise. Trinity College Dublin also added So You Think You Can Synthesise to their Youtube channel, helping to spread the word of synthetic biology and iGEM.

We took part in the outreach activities of other teams as well; for the team representing the University of Colorado Boulder, we constructed a short video addressing questions relating to our understanding of fracking; for team Paris-Saclay, we filled out a survey answering questions about our choice of chassis and participated in a synthetic-biology themed music video for Linköping University. We also answered surveys for the Oxford University teams about our iGEM experience and synthetic biology in general, respectively.

We were able to assist University of New South Wales achieve their goals by giving them a clone of Synechocystis hemeoxygenase II that had a kanamycin cassette inserted, to use as a positive control in the transformation of Synechocystis PCC6803. This clone was fundamental for the completion their project. We also gave them cultures of SynechocystisPCC6803 cells and advised them on the growth and transformation of this strain.

Fig1. The materials supplied to University of New South Wales


Australian iGEM Meet-ups

The Macquarie University iGEM team, and the teams representing the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales gathered to meet on two separate occasions - the 15th of July and the 15th of September.

On each occasion, all three teams delivered presentations detailing their project aims progress-to-date. These presentations were followed by questions, feedback and collaboration discussions which proved highly fruitful for all three teams.

Fig2. The Australian iGEM Meet-up