Team:ETH Zurich
From 2013.igem.org
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<li><b>Hydrolase Reactions</b><br> We use a set of orthogonal hydrolases as our reporter system that react within minutes with the added multi-substrate to produce a visible color. The set of hydrolases such as alkaline phosphatase (<i>phoA</i>), β-galactosidase (<i>lacZ</i>), acetylesterase (<i>aes</i>), β-N-Acetylglucosaminidase (<i>nagZ</i>) and β-glucuronidase (<i>gusA</i>) and their respective substrates react to achieve fast and colorful outputs with each color indicative of the next logical move for the player. | <li><b>Hydrolase Reactions</b><br> We use a set of orthogonal hydrolases as our reporter system that react within minutes with the added multi-substrate to produce a visible color. The set of hydrolases such as alkaline phosphatase (<i>phoA</i>), β-galactosidase (<i>lacZ</i>), acetylesterase (<i>aes</i>), β-N-Acetylglucosaminidase (<i>nagZ</i>) and β-glucuronidase (<i>gusA</i>) and their respective substrates react to achieve fast and colorful outputs with each color indicative of the next logical move for the player. | ||
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<li><b>From Minesweeper to Colisweeper</b><br>Mines secrete the signaling molecule OHHL whereas non-mines process the signal after diffusion of OHHL. High-pass filters were constructed to control the expression of different orthogonal hydrolases in non-mines, depending on the concentration of the OHHL molecules from the surrounding mines. The constant expression of lacZ enables the flagging of both mines and non mine colonies. Additionally, the mines express their own hydrolase. | <li><b>From Minesweeper to Colisweeper</b><br>Mines secrete the signaling molecule OHHL whereas non-mines process the signal after diffusion of OHHL. High-pass filters were constructed to control the expression of different orthogonal hydrolases in non-mines, depending on the concentration of the OHHL molecules from the surrounding mines. The constant expression of lacZ enables the flagging of both mines and non mine colonies. Additionally, the mines express their own hydrolase. | ||
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<li><b>The Model</b><br>As our system is based on sensing the OHHL concentration, the diffusion of the signalling molecule in the mine field is a vital part of the model. We study the diffusion in a hexagonal grid format with mine and non-mine colonies using a spatio-temporal model. The information from the model was used to validate and improve our system. | <li><b>The Model</b><br>As our system is based on sensing the OHHL concentration, the diffusion of the signalling molecule in the mine field is a vital part of the model. We study the diffusion in a hexagonal grid format with mine and non-mine colonies using a spatio-temporal model. The information from the model was used to validate and improve our system. | ||
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<li><b>High pass filter</b> | <li><b>High pass filter</b> | ||
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+ | <li><b>Human practice</b><br>Inspired by our Colisweeper project, we analyzed the relationship between synthetic biology and games. For one thing synthetic biology can be used to play common games in a new way, possibly for educational purposes or as a basis for proof-of-principle experiments for new circuits. More recently synthetic biologists also started to use games as a research tool, an innovative approach to make use of crowd-sourcing and distributed computing. We want to find correlations and discuss possible consequences for Synthetic Biology. | ||
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<li><b>Team</b><br>We are a team of seven highly motivated Bachelor- and Master Students at ETH Zürich pursuing various fields such as Biotechnology, Biomedical Engineering, Neurobiology and Bioinformatics. The iGEM project is carried out at one of the youngest departments of ETHZ located in Basel-Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering - flourishing in interdisciplinary biological research. If you're around Basel, make sure to visit our team's lab to play the bio-game Colisweeper! | <li><b>Team</b><br>We are a team of seven highly motivated Bachelor- and Master Students at ETH Zürich pursuing various fields such as Biotechnology, Biomedical Engineering, Neurobiology and Bioinformatics. The iGEM project is carried out at one of the youngest departments of ETHZ located in Basel-Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering - flourishing in interdisciplinary biological research. If you're around Basel, make sure to visit our team's lab to play the bio-game Colisweeper! |
Revision as of 10:09, 3 October 2013