Team:Newcastle/Notebook/achievements

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As part of the iGEM
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/0/00/BareCillus_Bronze_medal.png" alt="Bronze Medal" style="margin-left:-25px">
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/0/00/BareCillus_Bronze_medal.png" alt="Bronze Medal" style="margin-left:-25px">
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Revision as of 13:08, 6 September 2013

 
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IGEM Home Newcastle University

Achievements & Judging

As part of the iGEM Bronze Medal

Silver Medal Gold Medal
  • Improve the function of an existing BioBrick Part or Device (created by another team or your own institution in a previous year), enter this information in the Registry (in the “Experience” section of that BioBrick’s Registry entry), create a new registry page for the improved part, and submit this part to the iGEM Parts Registry (submissions must adhere to the iGEM Registry guidelines). The growth of the Registry depends on having a broad base of reliable parts. This is why the improvement of an existing part is just as important as the creation and documentation of a new part. An "improvement" is anything that improves the functionality and ease-of-use of a part, so that it is more likely to be used by the community. For instance: strengthening the expression of a part by mutating the DNA sequence; modifying one or a few parts in construct (Device) so that it performs its intended job better; improving a cloning or expression vector that can be easily used by the entire community; and of course, troubleshooting and fixing a part reported to be non-functional. Data from an experimental comparison between the original and improved part/ device is strongly recommended.
    - We are in the process of characterizing Part:BBa_K818000.
  • Help any registered iGEM team from another school or institution by, for example, characterizing a part, debugging a construct, or modeling or simulating their system.
    - We introduced Leeds to BioNetGen, gave parameters to Edinburgh and produced modelling videos for Manchester.
  • Your project may have implications for the environment, security, safety and ethics and/or ownership and sharing. Describe a novel approach that your team has used to help you and others consider these aspects of the design and outcomes of synthetic biology efforts. Please justify its novelty and how this approach might be adapted and scaled for others to use.
    - Visit our human practice section to see what we considered.
Newcastle University The Centre for Bacterial Cell Biology Newcastle Biomedicine The School of Computing Science The School of Computing Science