Team:Manchester/Notebooktest2

From 2013.igem.org

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  <p>It appears big things could come from this project!</p>
  <p>It appears big things could come from this project!</p>
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<p><center>[insert one of the YSB pictures]</center></p>
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<p>Even more economic progress was made (having Matt on the team was definitely a good decision!). We got concrete figures showing there is a link between palm oil growth and deforestation, that there is going to be a sharp rise in the price of naturally grown palm oil in the future.</p>
<p>Even more economic progress was made (having Matt on the team was definitely a good decision!). We got concrete figures showing there is a link between palm oil growth and deforestation, that there is going to be a sharp rise in the price of naturally grown palm oil in the future.</p>
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<p><center>[insert one of the lab pics?]</center></p>
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<p> <center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/8/85/GelExtractManc.jpg"  /></center> </p>
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<p>We also of course had more socials! First up was a Thai meal that lead onto a Gypsy jazz gig at a small bar in town, which the team thought was great. Then on friday we spent the evening chatting on the roof terrace of Marco’s flat, and took some really blurry photos (as you can see below)!</p>
<p>We also of course had more socials! First up was a Thai meal that lead onto a Gypsy jazz gig at a small bar in town, which the team thought was great. Then on friday we spent the evening chatting on the roof terrace of Marco’s flat, and took some really blurry photos (as you can see below)!</p>
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<p><center>[insert picture of Marco's rooftop here]</center></p>
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<p> <center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/3/3e/Marcosflat.jpg"  /></center> </p>
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Next week we will be cloning the FabA gene out of the <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) genome, which we extracted from wild-type this week. The primers needed for the cloning of FabA were also ordered.</p>
Next week we will be cloning the FabA gene out of the <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) genome, which we extracted from wild-type this week. The primers needed for the cloning of FabA were also ordered.</p>
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<p>The economics and ethics research is feeling close to completion, and the write up has begun! Now it will be a race to get it all on the wiki looking pretty in time. No small feat, but the ethics guys can do it! Our wiki is under development at the moment and is currently hidden, but more and more pages are filling up, including our Safety, Outreach and Attributions pages.</p>
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<p>The economics and ethics research is feeling close to completion, and the write up has begun! Now it will be a race to get it all on the wiki looking pretty in time. No small feat, but the ethics guys can do it!.</p>
<p>The project is getting increasingly stressful, which is seeing a rise in our team socialising time! Coincidence? I think not. This week the team visited Tim’s place for food on Saturday, then went to a few bars in town, our favourite of which was The Alchemist. If they serve drinks in conical flasks it still counts as research, right?</p>
<p>The project is getting increasingly stressful, which is seeing a rise in our team socialising time! Coincidence? I think not. This week the team visited Tim’s place for food on Saturday, then went to a few bars in town, our favourite of which was The Alchemist. If they serve drinks in conical flasks it still counts as research, right?</p>
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<p>1. RBS BioBricks from the kit were ligated into plasmid, transformed into <i>E. coli</i> DH5-alpha (?), and miniprepped. (this is probably wrong. Rob or Tim clarify please)</p>
<p>1. RBS BioBricks from the kit were ligated into plasmid, transformed into <i>E. coli</i> DH5-alpha (?), and miniprepped. (this is probably wrong. Rob or Tim clarify please)</p>
<p>2. We really want to BioBrick FabA because it is an important part of the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway of <i>E. coli</i> that is yet to be submitted to the Registry, and also we want to attempt to measure the kinetic properties of the enzyme to improve our model (include this?). This week we cloned the gene from <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) using PCR, extracted using gel electrophoresis and stored in the freezer. The team are now thinking on the best ways to characterise this gene.</p>
<p>2. We really want to BioBrick FabA because it is an important part of the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway of <i>E. coli</i> that is yet to be submitted to the Registry, and also we want to attempt to measure the kinetic properties of the enzyme to improve our model (include this?). This week we cloned the gene from <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) using PCR, extracted using gel electrophoresis and stored in the freezer. The team are now thinking on the best ways to characterise this gene.</p>
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<p>3. Sadly, this week we had to say goodbye to our hopes of achieving knockout of the FadD gene. 10 long weeks and nothing to show for it (other than a significant improvement in our PCR and gel electrophoresis skills)! (did this actually happen? i don’t even know, i’m just assuming and writing things)</p>
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<p>3. Sadly, this week we had to say goodbye to our hopes of achieving knockout of the FadD gene. 10 long weeks and nothing to show for it (other than a significant improvement in our PCR and gel electrophoresis skills)! </p>
<p>4. We met with Nik who guided us through the quenching and metabolite extraction of prokaryotic cells. Initially we are running reference samples through Orbitrap LC-MS (WT <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) cells in different media, solid and liquid fractions of authentic palm oil), which we will then compare to the fatty acid profiles of our constructs. Nik also kept us entertained with stories about how the Orbitrap technology was developed in a cellar here in Manchester, and showed us a signed mass spectrometer by Alexander Makarov himself!</p>
<p>4. We met with Nik who guided us through the quenching and metabolite extraction of prokaryotic cells. Initially we are running reference samples through Orbitrap LC-MS (WT <i>E. coli</i> BL21 (DE3) cells in different media, solid and liquid fractions of authentic palm oil), which we will then compare to the fatty acid profiles of our constructs. Nik also kept us entertained with stories about how the Orbitrap technology was developed in a cellar here in Manchester, and showed us a signed mass spectrometer by Alexander Makarov himself!</p>
<p>This week’s social saw us at Jess’ house once more, this time for delicious Malaysian food and a film night after a particularly gruelling day in the lab. It goes without saying that everyone enjoyed letting their hair down for a bit.</p>
<p>This week’s social saw us at Jess’ house once more, this time for delicious Malaysian food and a film night after a particularly gruelling day in the lab. It goes without saying that everyone enjoyed letting their hair down for a bit.</p>

Revision as of 14:22, 20 August 2013

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