Difference between revisions of "Team:Virginia/Collaborations"

 
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 40: Line 40:
 
<div class="body-text">
 
<div class="body-text">
 
<style type="text/css">
 
<style type="text/css">
 +
.body-text {
 +
width: 100%;
 +
height: auto;
 +
padding: 50px;
 +
padding-top: 0px;
 +
}
 
.body-text h1 {
 
.body-text h1 {
 
font-size: 30px;
 
font-size: 30px;
Line 54: Line 60:
 
</style>
 
</style>
 
<h1>iGEM Collaboration</h1>
 
<h1>iGEM Collaboration</h1>
<p>This year we worked closely with the <a href="/Team:Vanderbilt">Vanderbilt iGEM team</a> and the <a href="/Team:Rock_Ridge_Virginia">Rockridge High School iGEM team</a>. </p>
+
<p>This year we worked closely with the <a href="/Team:Vanderbilt">Vanderbilt iGEM team</a> and the <a href="/Team:UMaryland">University of Maryland College Park iGEM team</a>. </p>
<p>The Vanderbilt team has asked us to take some fluorescence readings and help them fine tune and prepare for the policy and practices portion of the iGEM competition. To help us, they have offered to cater their kill switch project to make it suitable for our BioBrick. In time, we could add their time dependent kill switch as a backup to our concentration dependent kill switch, <em>SacB (BBa_322921)</em>, in the event that our negative-selection system does not work as well as planned.</p>
+
<p>The Vanderbilt team asked us to help them with their Policy and Practices section. Their project concerning ways to minimize random mutation "hot spots" in DNA raised some important questions about the integrity of DNA and a limitation "ceiling" for any such device that helps counter evolution. In return, they offered to cater their kill switch project to make it suitable for our BioBrick. For further steps, we could add their time dependent kill switch as a backup to our concentration dependent kill switch, <em>SacB (BBa_322921)</em>, in the event that our negative-selection system does not work as well as planned.</p>
<p>The Rockridge team is brand new and therefore lacked the funding and support other teams enjoy. We kept in communication with them and did our best to answer the sort of questions that past team members might have been able to help them with. We also supplied them with some BL21 competent cells so that they could effectively carry out their transformations.
+
<p>We also attended the iGEM meetup hosted by the University of Maryland College Park. We had a a fun day discussing our projects with the other teams in attendance and also enjoyed listening to talks by the guest speakers. The meetup was a good way to collaborate with other University teams as well as with researchers and government officials already in the field of synthetic biology.  
 
</p>
 
</p>
 
</div>
 
</div>
Line 184: Line 190:
 
background:#000000;
 
background:#000000;
 
clear:both;
 
clear:both;
 +
border-top: 3px solid #007bb6;
 
}
 
}
 
footer p:first-child {
 
footer p:first-child {

Latest revision as of 02:37, 19 September 2015

University of Virginia iGEM 2015

iGEM Collaboration

This year we worked closely with the Vanderbilt iGEM team and the University of Maryland College Park iGEM team.

The Vanderbilt team asked us to help them with their Policy and Practices section. Their project concerning ways to minimize random mutation "hot spots" in DNA raised some important questions about the integrity of DNA and a limitation "ceiling" for any such device that helps counter evolution. In return, they offered to cater their kill switch project to make it suitable for our BioBrick. For further steps, we could add their time dependent kill switch as a backup to our concentration dependent kill switch, SacB (BBa_322921), in the event that our negative-selection system does not work as well as planned.

We also attended the iGEM meetup hosted by the University of Maryland College Park. We had a a fun day discussing our projects with the other teams in attendance and also enjoyed listening to talks by the guest speakers. The meetup was a good way to collaborate with other University teams as well as with researchers and government officials already in the field of synthetic biology.

University of Virginia iGEM

148 Gilmer Hall

485 McCormick Road

Charlottesville, Virginia 22904

United States of America

virginia.igem@gmail.com