Team:Panama

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  style="font-size: 0.4cm;">Under supervision of <strong>Dr.
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  style="font-size: 0.4cm;">Rhamnolipids are naturally occurring glycolipids produced by the Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Rhamnolipids have many applications, because of their natural biosurfactant, emulsifying, fungicidal, antibiotic, and pharmaceutical properties. Also rhamnolipids can operate in extreme conditions such as high temperature, pH, and salinity. They have a low toxicity, and they are biodegradable compared to their synthetic chemical counterparts. Rhamnolipid is composed of rhamnose sugar molecule and b-hydroxyalkanoic acid. The rhamnosyltransferase 1 complex (RhlAB) is the key enzyme responsible for transferring the rhamnose moiety to the b-hydroxyalkanoic acid moiety to biosynthesize rhamnolipid.  Since the organisms known to produce rhamnolipids are almost exclusively pathogens. For this reason, we propose the non-pathogenic nature of E. coli as an attractive candidate for commercial rhamnolipid production by assembling our rhamnosyltransferase 1 gene (rhlAB) into a BioBrick using synthetic biology to engineer these new rhamnosyltransferase 1 producing bacteria for human benefit.</span></span></span></span></p>
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Patrick Nee</strong>, <strong>Dr. Darío Solís</strong>
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and <strong>Dr. Sara Pinzon</strong>, a team<strong>
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            </strong><span style="font-weight: normal;">based
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in Panama City, Republic of Panama, recruiting team members from
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multiple schools.</span></span></span></span></p>
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Revision as of 15:15, 13 July 2010

IGEM Panama Team

Team_Panama
Welcome to the Panama Team Wiki for iGEM 2010
Assembling the enzyme gene Rhamnosiltransferase 1 (rhlAB) into a Biobrick-friendly for rhamnolipid production in E. coli

 

Rhamnolipids are naturally occurring glycolipids produced by the Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Rhamnolipids have many applications, because of their natural biosurfactant, emulsifying, fungicidal, antibiotic, and pharmaceutical properties. Also rhamnolipids can operate in extreme conditions such as high temperature, pH, and salinity. They have a low toxicity, and they are biodegradable compared to their synthetic chemical counterparts. Rhamnolipid is composed of rhamnose sugar molecule and b-hydroxyalkanoic acid. The rhamnosyltransferase 1 complex (RhlAB) is the key enzyme responsible for transferring the rhamnose moiety to the b-hydroxyalkanoic acid moiety to biosynthesize rhamnolipid. Since the organisms known to produce rhamnolipids are almost exclusively pathogens. For this reason, we propose the non-pathogenic nature of E. coli as an attractive candidate for commercial rhamnolipid production by assembling our rhamnosyltransferase 1 gene (rhlAB) into a BioBrick using synthetic biology to engineer these new rhamnosyltransferase 1 producing bacteria for human benefit.

BioBricks Boot Camp

How the BioBricks Assembly Standard 10 works: English or Spanish

Project Ideas

Talk to INDICASAT and STRI researchers for compounds they have reserached that could be turned into BioBricks parts.

List of ideas from 2007, including software ideas.
Tom Knight's list of parts he wishes someone would develop.
 

Ezequiel

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