Difference between revisions of "Team:UMaryland/Design"

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Although the process <b>of PCR</b><strike>of amplifying genetic material is remarkable</strike>, the <b>necessary</b> hardware needed to do it is relatively simple. <b>While different templates, primers, and polymerases can be used, a thermocycler capable of maintaining temperatures between 4 and 95 degrees is absolutely required</b>.<strike>All that is required are three different temperatures which are maintained by the machine, enabling the enzymes and template to do the work of PCR.</strike> Current <strike>PCR machines</strike> <b>thermocyclers</b> cost thousands of dollars, <b>which is often prohibitively expensive for a DIY Bio effort.</b> <strike>and although there exists open source, DIY PCR machines, their costs still range in the hundreds of dollars. Here at the University of Maryland, we thought that that was an absurd notion. PCR, because of its simplicity and utility, is a robust tool for the diagnosis of many diseases both in the developed and developing world.</strike> Making the device cheaper would give more people accessibility to this <b>valuable lab tool</b><strike>platform</strike>.<strike> Accessibility enables further innovation and development of novel methods for disease detection and this in turn enables better and faster diagnosis and treatment both in the developed and developing world.</strike>
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Although the process <b>of PCR</b><strike>of amplifying genetic material is remarkable</strike>, the <b>necessary</b> hardware needed to do it is relatively simple. <b>While different templates, primers, and polymerases can be used, a thermocycler capable of maintaining temperatures between 4 and 95 degrees is absolutely required</b>.<strike>All that is required are three different temperatures which are maintained by the machine, enabling the enzymes and template to do the work of PCR.</strike> Current <strike>PCR machines</strike> <b>thermocyclers</b> cost thousands of dollars, <b>which is often prohibitively expensive for a DIY Bio effort.</b> <strike>and although there exists open source, DIY PCR machines, their costs still range in the hundreds of dollars. Here at the University of Maryland, we thought that that was an absurd notion. PCR, because of its simplicity and utility, is a robust tool for the diagnosis of many diseases both in the developed and developing world.</strike> Making the device cheaper would give more people accessibility to this <b>valuable lab tool, enabling breakthrough research in more places around the globe</b><strike>platform</strike>.<strike> Accessibility enables further innovation and development of novel methods for disease detection and this in turn enables better and faster diagnosis and treatment both in the developed and developing world.</strike>
 
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Another major advantage of "cheap" is education. Here at the University of Maryland, we acknowledge that iGEM is a competition, however we also understand that this competition is also a collaboration. It is an opportunity for all of us to learn from one another and serves as the foundation for future discovery, innovation, and new projects. We hope that our work with the PCR machine will inspire many more teams to tackle designing hardware. We hope that our current collaborations with Duke University foster better and more innovative projects from both of our teams. And most important, we hope that our efforts will be able to inspire the future generation of iGEMer's and the newest members of the iGEM community; high school students.  
 
Another major advantage of "cheap" is education. Here at the University of Maryland, we acknowledge that iGEM is a competition, however we also understand that this competition is also a collaboration. It is an opportunity for all of us to learn from one another and serves as the foundation for future discovery, innovation, and new projects. We hope that our work with the PCR machine will inspire many more teams to tackle designing hardware. We hope that our current collaborations with Duke University foster better and more innovative projects from both of our teams. And most important, we hope that our efforts will be able to inspire the future generation of iGEMer's and the newest members of the iGEM community; high school students.  

Revision as of 07:43, 18 September 2015