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| <li><a href="#environ" style="color:#666666">Environmental Impact</a></li> | | <li><a href="#environ" style="color:#666666">Environmental Impact</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#risk" style="color:#666666">Risk Assessment</a></li> | | <li><a href="#risk" style="color:#666666">Risk Assessment</a></li> |
− | <li><a href="#iCollabs" style="color:#666666">iGEM Collaboration</a></li> | + | |
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− | <h1 id = "iCollabs">iGEM Collaborations</h1>
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− | <p>This year, Cornell iGEM has collaborated with Yale iGEM by engaging in the team’s discussion about utilizing non-model organisms as part of projects and research. This dialogue was to address the increasing amount of iGEM projects that have centered around these non-model organisms, instead of Escherichia coli or Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yale iGEM identified our project team as one that was using a non-model organism as part of our project, and have thus asked us to share our experiences working with our non-model organism. We were more than happy to share our experiences working with Flavobacterium psychrophilum, our bacteria of interest that we were trying to tackle with fishPHARM. Because F. psychrophilum is not a bacterial strain commonly worked with, we occasionally had trouble finding necessary information from scientific journals. Luckily, we were able to collaborate with a professor who had worked with F. psychrophilum and was able to provide us much needed insight into the organism. In collaborating with Yale iGEM, we share their sentiments in the hopes that future iGEM teams will be able to utilize a greater variety of non-model organisms for their projects. </p>
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