Team:Paris Bettencourt/Acknowledgements
From 2013.igem.org
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Host Laboratory
Our iGEM team is kindly hosted in the CRI (Inderdisciplinary Research Center) located in the Faculté de médecine Paris Descartes at the center of Paris. In the heart of one of Paris' biggest hospitals, the CRI hosts interdisciplinary undergraduate (LFdV), Master (AIV); devoted also to systems and synthetic biology!) as well as a PhD program (FdV). This center is directed by François Taddei and Ariel Lindner. We also want especially like to thank Jake, Zoran, Stanislas, Mathias and Luis, who made themselves available at any time, and guided us through this project.
For the Laboratory's facilities, we are kindly hosted by the CRI/INSERM U1001 lab, that lent us benches, microscopes and others facilities. We thank all the members of the INSERM U1001 for their kind help and that they shared not only their equipment but also their experience with us. We want to name Sebastien Fleurier and Marie-Florence Bredèche for their support. We would like to give a special thank Chantal Lotton, the lab manager, for her advices on the bench, her warm words, her organization skills, her introductions, for being there for us any time and that she ensured that we worked safely.
François Taddei |
Ariel Lindner |
Special Thanks
We want to thank Tamara Milosevic and Maria Pottier who survived the summer with us in the lab. We would also like to thank the secretary staff of the CRI, Laura Ciriani, Véronique Waquet, Elodie Kaslikowski and the rest of the staff for their help and advice in the administrative tasks and commercial relations every team has to face. We also want to thank the labs that supported us by making us their parts/strains available. Special thanks go to Monica Ortiz from the Endy Lab in Stanford, Dr. Anil Ojha from the INSERM U571 Lab, Daniel A. Portnoy from the University of California, Pamela Silver from the Harvard Medical School, Nicole Guiso, Nicolas Hegerle and Brigitte Gicquel from the Institute Pasteur and Stephane Canaan from CNRS. Also, thanks to Lorenzo Guglielmetti for useful discussions on the situation of TB in France and Europe.
Specially, we like to thank Nicola Bertoldi from Ecole Normale Supérieure. Nicola comes from a philosophy background, and has a great interest in Synthetic Biology. We wanted for him to be officially part of the team, but due to differences in calendar it was not possible. However, during the little time we got together came the essay on "Technology Transfer"