Difference between revisions of "Team:Harvard BioDesign/Project"

Line 152: Line 152:
 
             <footer>Feeling Lost? Check out our basics section!<br/>
 
             <footer>Feeling Lost? Check out our basics section!<br/>
 
<div id="buttonbox">
 
<div id="buttonbox">
<a href="#sitemap" style="font-family:'Lato';color:#C1E8DE;font-size:23px;"><h4 class="mid" style="color:#000;">Click Here</h4><img class="rot" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/6/64/Harvard_Circle_Outside.png"/></a>
+
<a href="#basics" style="font-family:'Lato';color:#C1E8DE;font-size:23px;"><h4 class="mid" style="color:#000;">Click Here</h4><img class="rot" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2015/6/64/Harvard_Circle_Outside.png"/></a>
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
             </footer>
 
             </footer>

Revision as of 03:03, 21 August 2015


Prologue by HTML5 UP

Brief Project Intro

About our project

Our team is engineering E. coli to bind to colon cancer cells through the use of their type I pili, which are hair-like appendages that have an adhesive domain. Naturally, the strains in E. coli that produce pili bind to alpha-D-mannose, which can cause urinary tract infections. However, our team is altering a non-harmful strain to produce pili using a modified Fim gene in order to localize the bacteria as a tool. For treatment of cancer, once the bacteria are localized on the cells, the next step is to make them capable of producing a concentrated toxin or to administer a therapeutic. Other potential applications for our E. coli include water pollution clean up through methods such as flocculation and targeting areas through GFP.

Feeling Lost? Check out our basics section!

Experiments

Design

Basics