Team:MIT phage
From 2010.igem.org
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<tr><td><br><b>Introduction</b> | <tr><td><br><b>Introduction</b> | ||
<br><b>In the context of past iGEM projects</b> and past publications, our project is unique in that.. | <br><b>In the context of past iGEM projects</b> and past publications, our project is unique in that.. | ||
- | <br><b> | + | <br><b>Construction plan, circuit diagram</b> |
+ | <br><b>Results</b> | ||
</td> | </td> | ||
</table> | </table> |
Revision as of 18:29, 10 October 2010
The 2010 MIT iGEM team. We are biological engineers, physicists, electrical engineers, chemical engineers, mathematicians, and computer scientists.
Programmable, Self-constructing Biomaterials |
The 2010 MIT iGEM team focused on the control and production of self-constructing and self-repairing living biomaterials through both bacterial and mammalian engineering. We ventured to set up the framework for material formation in both types of cells, for future applications in living, self-repairing materials and in vitro organogenesis respectively. We have accomplished far beyond what we expected of ourselves! In addition to our project, we have created a new Mammalian Biobrick standard, contributed original parts for mammalian cells and bacteriophage, and we have biobricked two working toggles for the registry. |
hairy cells: polymerizing phage |
Introduction In the context of past iGEM projects and past publications, our project is unique in that.. Construction plan, circuit diagram Results |