Team:TU-Munich

From 2013.igem.org

Revision as of 20:28, 30 August 2013 by IngmarPolte (Talk | contribs)


PhyscoFilter - Clean different

The contamination of aquatic ecosystems with a multitude of anthropogenic pollutants has been a problem since the industrial revolution. Pollutants such as antibiotics, hormones and toxins threaten environmental health and are often not effectively removed by traditional water cleaning methods. We propose the employment of transgenic plants producing effectors for enzymatic degradation (BioDegradation) or specific binding (BioAccumulation) of pollutants. The autotrophic, sedentary, aquatic nature of the moss Physcomitrella patens makes it an optimal chassis for a self-renewing, low-maintenance and cheap water filter. A light-triggered kill switch prevents unintended release into the environment by limiting viability to places where a specific wavelength spectrum has been filtered out. Furthermore, having developed a system to implement our filter in aquatic environments, we investigated the application of this new technology and examined its economic potential. Based upon our results, we believe that our approach can improve the global water quality in a sustainable fashion.

Due to the huge extent of the underlying problem we propose the employment of transgenic plants, such as the moss Physcomitrella patens, that produce the respective effectors for the degradation. The sedentary, aquatic nature of plants makes them an optimal chassis for a self-renewing and cheap water filter. We believe that this approach can change the global water quality in a sustainable fashion.

Gabbagandalf.png

Team TU-Munich 2013

First team picture of TU-Munich iGEM team 2013

We, the team for the Technical University of Munich consisting of 11 highly motivated and dedicated undergraduate students. We are students from the subjects Molecular Biotechnology, Biochemistry, Mathematics and Mechanical Engineering.

Sponsors

Locations of visitors to this page