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Revision as of 22:21, 18 September 2015
How great would it be to cure cystic fibrosis by correcting the dysfunctional mRNA that causes it without genetically modifying the patient?
How safer could our cities be if victims could prevent rape by easily and discretely detecting drugs put in their drinks to make them powerless?
How much would the possibility to perform cheap and fast western blotting for every protein revolutionize the scientific community?
Nature has provided us with the right tools: functional nucleic acids
We made it possible to design functional nucleic acids following the concepts of modularization and standardization
We created a new standard to clone them and work with them, in vitro and in vivo
We set up assays to validate our in silico designs and improve our designing rules
Dive deeper into the ocean of our project to find out how we set the foundations to elevate functional nucleic acids to a new leading role in synthetic biology.