Team:TU Delft/Project/abstract

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(Project Abstract)
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Pollution of soil and water environments by crude oil has been, and is still today, an important environmental issue. This was once more confirmed with the oil-spill in the Gulf of Mexico, but is also an issue that has to be faced continuously during the process of oil extraction from oil sands. Cleaning has proven to be challenging, but synthetic biology may hold the key to sustainable bio-remedial solutions for the future. What if we could design a small, autonomous, self-replicating, inexpensive method to remove oil from aqueous environments? The TU Delft iGEM 2010 team spent their summer designing a system that can tolerate, sense, dissolve & degrade hydrocarbons in aqueous environments, which could open new doors for the oil-industry.  
Pollution of soil and water environments by crude oil has been, and is still today, an important environmental issue. This was once more confirmed with the oil-spill in the Gulf of Mexico, but is also an issue that has to be faced continuously during the process of oil extraction from oil sands. Cleaning has proven to be challenging, but synthetic biology may hold the key to sustainable bio-remedial solutions for the future. What if we could design a small, autonomous, self-replicating, inexpensive method to remove oil from aqueous environments? The TU Delft iGEM 2010 team spent their summer designing a system that can tolerate, sense, dissolve & degrade hydrocarbons in aqueous environments, which could open new doors for the oil-industry.  
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Read our full [[Team:TU_Delft/Project/introduction|Introduction]].
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Read our full [[Team:TU_Delft/Project/introduction|Introduction]] or jump straight to the subprojects:
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*[[Team:TU_Delft/Project/alkane-degradation|Alkane Degradation]]
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*[[Team:TU_Delft/Project/tolerance|Solvent & Salt Tolerance]]
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*[[Team:TU_Delft/Project/solubility|Solubility]]
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*[[Team:TU_Delft/Project/sensing|Sensing]]
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*[[Team:TU_Delft/Project/rbs-characterization|RBS Characterization]]
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Or skip all of this and read our [[Team:TU_Delft/Project/conclusions|Conclusions]].

Revision as of 08:28, 14 October 2010

Project Abstract

Alkanivore: Enabling hydrocarbon degradation in aqueous environments

Pollution of soil and water environments by crude oil has been, and is still today, an important environmental issue. This was once more confirmed with the oil-spill in the Gulf of Mexico, but is also an issue that has to be faced continuously during the process of oil extraction from oil sands. Cleaning has proven to be challenging, but synthetic biology may hold the key to sustainable bio-remedial solutions for the future. What if we could design a small, autonomous, self-replicating, inexpensive method to remove oil from aqueous environments? The TU Delft iGEM 2010 team spent their summer designing a system that can tolerate, sense, dissolve & degrade hydrocarbons in aqueous environments, which could open new doors for the oil-industry.

Read our full Introduction or jump straight to the subprojects:

Or skip all of this and read our Conclusions.