Team:Baltimore US

From 2010.igem.org

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[[Image:TitleBarBalti US.png | center]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US|Home]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Team|Team]]
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{| style="background-color:#7998AD;" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" border="0" bordercolor="#fff" width="924px" align="center"
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!align="center"|[https://igem.org/Team.cgi?year=2010&team_name=Baltimore_US Official Team Profile]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US|<span style="color:white;">Home</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Project|Project]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Team|<span style="color:white;">Team</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Parts|Parts Submitted to the Registry]]
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!align="center"|[https://igem.org/Team.cgi?year=2010&team_name=Baltimore_US <span style="color:white;">Official Team Profile</span>]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Modeling|Modeling]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Project|<span style="color:white;">Project</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Notebook|Notebook]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Parts|<span style="color:white;">Submitted Parts</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Safety|Safety]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Modeling|<span style="color:white;">Modeling</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Notebook|<span style="color:white;">Notebook</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/MeetingTimes|<span style="color:white;">Meeting/Lab Times</span>]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US/Safety|<span style="color:white;">Safety</span>]]
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====DIY-Gem: a path towards low-cost high-throughput gene synthesis====
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Synthetic biology research requires more cost effective approaches toward wetware and hardware accessibility. We are developing low-cost alternatives to existing tools and techniques in an attempt to expand participation in biological research and development. Our project expands the accessibility of ''Taq'' polymerase by engineering it to BioBrick standards. This allows for the expression and recovery of polymerase from transformed ''E. coli'' at a fraction of the cost of highly purified commercial enzyme. In addition, we have developed inexpensive and easily assembled lab equipment such as a gel-electrophoresis apparatus and a PCR thermal cycler. By enabling researchers to synthesize their own reagents and purchase or produce inexpensive tools, we hope to lower the barriers to entry for synthetic biology.
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|'''Baltimore-US''', is made up from members of the BioMore GenoBlasts (http://www.genoblasts.com), Maryland's - Synthetic Biology SIG and faculty and students from area universities including Community College of Baltimore County (CCBC), Loyola and Towson University (TU). We have assembled a team of professional and amateur scientists/engineers/artists to put forth a team for this years iGEM 2010 competition. With a discussion amongst the other DIY-Bio enthusiasts, we worked with the Community College of Baltimore County and Professor Tom Burkett to create a venue where folks could step into this competition and learn with hands on experience the tools, techniques, and resources necessary to explore this emerging field, under the observance of trained professionals. Faculty Instructors and Advisors are Tom Burkett, Assistant Professor of Biology & Biotechnology at CCBC, Lisa Scheifele, Assistant Professor of Biology at Loyola College, and Elizabeth Goode, Asssociate Professor of Mathematics at Towson University.
 
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We are the first DIY-Bio community ( http://diybio.org/ ) to have successfully entered the iGEM competition. Our members range in age and we're made up of graduates, students, professors of  HCC, CCBC, Georgetown, Towson and Loyola University. We've got electrical engineers, roboticists, materials scientists, geneticists, health-care professionals, mathematicians & theortical computer scientists, and computer programmers. But we're beginners and we've come together to try and see what we might be able to accomplish with these new technologies.
 
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|[[Image:Baltimore_US_logo.png|200px|right|frame]]
 
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''Regardless of what we create, we hope to document the experiences and frustrations in hopes of making the field more accessible to other DIY-Bio enthusiasts and students, creating additional media and educational tools along the way.''
 
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'''Baltimore-US''' includes members from local educational institutions including the Community College of Baltimore County, and Loyola and Towson Universities, along with members of local DIY communities.  We wish to create a venue that enables the broader community to step into the iGEM competition, to gain hands-on laboratory experience, and to learn the tools and techniques necessary to explore the emerging field of synthetic biology while under the watchful eye of trained professionals.
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|[[Image:Baltimore_US_team.png|right|frame|Your team picture]]
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====Faculty Instructors and Advisors====
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|align="center"|[[Team:Baltimore_US | Team Example]]
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<li>Tom Burkett, Associate Professor of Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing at CCBC</li>
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<li>Lisa Scheifele, Assistant Professor of Biology at Loyola University Maryland</li>
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<li>Elizabeth Goode, Associate Professor of Mathematics at Towson University.</li>
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</ul>
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Our members range in age and experience. We've got biological and electrical engineers, computer scientists and computer programmers and curious novices. We've come together with enthusiasm to try and see what we might be able to accomplish with these new technologies.
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<!--- The Mission, Experiments --->
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<center>'''Baltimore-US thanks the following companies for donations to our team:'''</center>
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[[image:Qiagen logo.png|150px]] [[image:Axygen logo.png|150px]][[image:NEB logo.jpg|150px]]
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Latest revision as of 18:59, 27 October 2010

TitleBarBalti US.png
Home Team Official Team Profile Project Submitted Parts Modeling Notebook Meeting/Lab Times Safety


Nsf1.gif


DIY-Gem: a path towards low-cost high-throughput gene synthesis

Synthetic biology research requires more cost effective approaches toward wetware and hardware accessibility. We are developing low-cost alternatives to existing tools and techniques in an attempt to expand participation in biological research and development. Our project expands the accessibility of Taq polymerase by engineering it to BioBrick standards. This allows for the expression and recovery of polymerase from transformed E. coli at a fraction of the cost of highly purified commercial enzyme. In addition, we have developed inexpensive and easily assembled lab equipment such as a gel-electrophoresis apparatus and a PCR thermal cycler. By enabling researchers to synthesize their own reagents and purchase or produce inexpensive tools, we hope to lower the barriers to entry for synthetic biology.


Baltimore-US includes members from local educational institutions including the Community College of Baltimore County, and Loyola and Towson Universities, along with members of local DIY communities. We wish to create a venue that enables the broader community to step into the iGEM competition, to gain hands-on laboratory experience, and to learn the tools and techniques necessary to explore the emerging field of synthetic biology while under the watchful eye of trained professionals.

Faculty Instructors and Advisors

  • Tom Burkett, Associate Professor of Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing at CCBC
  • Lisa Scheifele, Assistant Professor of Biology at Loyola University Maryland
  • Elizabeth Goode, Associate Professor of Mathematics at Towson University.


Our members range in age and experience. We've got biological and electrical engineers, computer scientists and computer programmers and curious novices. We've come together with enthusiasm to try and see what we might be able to accomplish with these new technologies.

Baltimore-US thanks the following companies for donations to our team:

Qiagen logo.png Axygen logo.pngNEB logo.jpg