Team:Grenoble-EMSE-LSU/Team/Advisors

From 2013.igem.org

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                                         Without their help and advice, our work would have been a lot harder in every aspect of this project. For the scientific part of course, but also for other matters like planning, logistics... That is why we wanted to especially thank all of them.<br>
                                         Without their help and advice, our work would have been a lot harder in every aspect of this project. For the scientific part of course, but also for other matters like planning, logistics... That is why we wanted to especially thank all of them.<br>
You can read their presentations below for further information:<br><br>
You can read their presentations below for further information:<br><br>
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<a href="#">Robert Baptist</a>, <a href="#geoffrey">Geoffrey Bouchage</a>, <a href="#franz">Franz Bruckert</a>, <a href="#hidde">Hidde de Jong</a>, <a href="#hans">Hans Geiselmann</a>, <a href="#pierre">Pierre Pautré</a>, <a href="#stephane">Stéphane Pinhal</a>, <a href="#delphine">Delphine Ropers</a>, <a href="#marianne">Marianne Weidenhaupt</a></p>
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<a href="#">Ina Attrée</a>, <a href="#robert">Robert Baptist</a>, <a href="#geoffrey">Geoffrey Bouchage</a>, <a href="#franz">Franz Bruckert</a>, <a href="#alex">Alexandre Dawid</a>, <a href="#valerie">Valérie Forest</a>, <a href="#hidde">Hidde de Jong</a>, <a href="#hans">Hans Geiselmann</a>, <a href="#adeline">Adeline Millet</a>, <a href="#pierre">Pierre Pautré</a>, <a href="#stephane">Stéphane Pinhal</a>, <a href="#delphine">Delphine Ropers</a>, <a href="#marianne">Marianne Weidenhaupt</a></p>
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<h2 id="robert">Ina Attrée</h2>
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                                        <img src="" style="float:left" height="100px">
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<p><strong>CEA</strong><br>
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                                        <em></em><br><br>
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                                        </p>
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<h2 id="hidde">Franz Bruckert</h2>
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<h2 id="alex">Franz Bruckert</h2>
                                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/09/Franz.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
                                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/0/09/Franz.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
<p><strong>Grenoble INP</strong><br>
<p><strong>Grenoble INP</strong><br>
                                         <em>Teacher researcher in biology</em><br><br>
                                         <em>Teacher researcher in biology</em><br><br>
                                         To my point of view, the most interesting aspect of the iGEM project is the collective construction of a new way of doing bioengineering. The modular approach is clearly more efficient in terms of experimental effort and it also helps understanding how cellular functions are organized. Implementing new functions in bacteria should in turn help to build up more efficient ways to represent the living beings complexity. Besides that, I like and challenges and iGEM is all of this.</p>
                                         To my point of view, the most interesting aspect of the iGEM project is the collective construction of a new way of doing bioengineering. The modular approach is clearly more efficient in terms of experimental effort and it also helps understanding how cellular functions are organized. Implementing new functions in bacteria should in turn help to build up more efficient ways to represent the living beings complexity. Besides that, I like and challenges and iGEM is all of this.</p>
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<h2 id="valerie">Alexandre Dawid</h2>
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                                        <img src="" style="float:left" height="100px">
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<p><strong>Liphy</strong><br>
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                                        <em></em><br><br>
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                                        </p>
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<h2 id="hans">Valérie Forest</h2>
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                                        <img src="" style="float:left" height="100px">
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<p><strong>ENSM Saint-Etienne</strong><br>
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                                        <em></em><br><br>
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                                        </p>
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<h2 id="hidde">Hans Geiselmann</h2>
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                                        <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/1/1b/Hans.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
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<p><strong>Grenoble University</strong><br>
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                                        <em>Teacher researcher in microbiology</em><br><br>
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                                        I am a microbiologist at the university of Grenoble. In the past, I have combined biophysics, molecular biology and bacteriology to understand the functioning of Escherichia coli. More recently, in a systems biology approach, I have used precise measurements of gene expression to test predictions of mathematical models of the corresponding regulatory system. Synthetic biology, and thus iGEM, is the next step in understanding biological systems: if we really understand the functioning of a system, we can modify its behavior. In iGEM we move from designing a desired behavior to instantiating the network in the real organism: a formidable challenge in interdisciplinary research and a very stimulating endeavor, in large parts thanks to a team of excellent and motivated students from different backgrounds.</p>
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<h2 id="hans">Hidde de Jong</h2>
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<h2 id="adeline">Hidde de Jong</h2>
                                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/3/30/Hidde.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
                                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/3/30/Hidde.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
<p><strong>INRIA Grenoble - Rhônes-Alpes</strong><br>
<p><strong>INRIA Grenoble - Rhônes-Alpes</strong><br>
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                                         An engineer by training, I like to do interdisciplinary research, at the interface of biology, computer science, and mathematics. More specifically, since a number of years I have been interested in the modeling of the regulatory networks controlling the functioning of  bacteria. Synthetic biology proposes an interesting approach for better understanding these networks: can we modify the network connections so as to extend the behavioral repertoire of bacterial cells? The iGEM competition addresses these questions in an original way, at the same time playful and highly demanding.</p>
                                         An engineer by training, I like to do interdisciplinary research, at the interface of biology, computer science, and mathematics. More specifically, since a number of years I have been interested in the modeling of the regulatory networks controlling the functioning of  bacteria. Synthetic biology proposes an interesting approach for better understanding these networks: can we modify the network connections so as to extend the behavioral repertoire of bacterial cells? The iGEM competition addresses these questions in an original way, at the same time playful and highly demanding.</p>
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<h2 id="pierre">Hans Geiselmann</h2>
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<h2 id="pierre">Adeline Millet</h2>
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                                         <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2012/1/1b/Hans.png" style="float:left" height="100px">
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                                         <img src="" style="float:left" height="100px">
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<p><strong>Grenoble University</strong><br>
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<p><strong>Liphy</strong></p>
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                                        <em>Teacher researcher in microbiology</em><br><br>
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                                        I am a microbiologist at the university of Grenoble. In the past, I have combined biophysics, molecular biology and bacteriology to understand the functioning of Escherichia coli. More recently, in a systems biology approach, I have used precise measurements of gene expression to test predictions of mathematical models of the corresponding regulatory system. Synthetic biology, and thus iGEM, is the next step in understanding biological systems: if we really understand the functioning of a system, we can modify its behavior. In iGEM we move from designing a desired behavior to instantiating the network in the real organism: a formidable challenge in interdisciplinary research and a very stimulating endeavor, in large parts thanks to a team of excellent and motivated students from different backgrounds.</p>
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Revision as of 12:21, 24 July 2013

Grenoble-EMSE-LSU, iGEM


Grenoble-EMSE-LSU, iGEM

Grenoble-EMSE-LSU, iGEM

Retrieved from "http://2013.igem.org/Team:Grenoble-EMSE-LSU/Team/Advisors"