Team:TU Delft/Parts
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==Parts== | ==Parts== | ||
- | [[Image:TU_Delft_Biobrick-catimg.png|right]]We enabled our bugs to degrade hydrocarbons using ''standard biological parts'', also called ''BioBricks''. These are nucleic acid-encoded molecular biological functions, along with the associated information defining and describing the parts. You can find more information about this on the website of [http://biobricks.org/ The BioBricks Foundation]. | + | [[Image:TU_Delft_Biobrick-catimg.png|250px|right]]We enabled our bugs to degrade hydrocarbons using ''standard biological parts'', also called ''BioBricks''. These are nucleic acid-encoded molecular biological functions, along with the associated information defining and describing the parts. You can find more information about this on the website of [http://biobricks.org/ The BioBricks Foundation]. |
Using these molecules any synthetic biologist or biological engineer can program living organisms. [[Team:TU_Delft/Parts/biobricks|All our parts]] are available to anyone for free via MIT's [http://parts.mit.edu Registry of Standard Biological Parts]. | Using these molecules any synthetic biologist or biological engineer can program living organisms. [[Team:TU_Delft/Parts/biobricks|All our parts]] are available to anyone for free via MIT's [http://parts.mit.edu Registry of Standard Biological Parts]. |
Revision as of 06:19, 19 October 2010
Parts
We enabled our bugs to degrade hydrocarbons using standard biological parts, also called BioBricks. These are nucleic acid-encoded molecular biological functions, along with the associated information defining and describing the parts. You can find more information about this on the website of [http://biobricks.org/ The BioBricks Foundation].Using these molecules any synthetic biologist or biological engineer can program living organisms. All our parts are available to anyone for free via MIT's [http://parts.mit.edu Registry of Standard Biological Parts].
After designing the parts, we operated them in E. coli cells. The methods we used are described on the Characterization page.