Team:EPF Lausanne

From 2014.igem.org

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<p class="lead"> The biological concepts behind the BioPad project have applications both in basic and applied sciences. From a purely scientific perspective, the ideas introduced and implemented by our project are novel and promising for future applications. The BioPad is also an attractive concept that is tangible for the general public and will allow people to look at synthetic biology in a different way. Hence, the combination of novel biological concepts, a cool idea, and the community awareness that our project provides, makes the BioPad project perfect for iGEM !</p>
<p class="lead"> The biological concepts behind the BioPad project have applications both in basic and applied sciences. From a purely scientific perspective, the ideas introduced and implemented by our project are novel and promising for future applications. The BioPad is also an attractive concept that is tangible for the general public and will allow people to look at synthetic biology in a different way. Hence, the combination of novel biological concepts, a cool idea, and the community awareness that our project provides, makes the BioPad project perfect for iGEM !</p>
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<h2>The BioPad's applications in a nutshell</h2>
<h2>The BioPad's applications in a nutshell</h2>

Revision as of 17:14, 2 October 2014

Our project in a nutshell





Summary of our project

EPFL_interaction_IFP_cartoon

The 2014 EPFL iGEM team has been working on showing that biologically engineered organisms can detect and process signals in fast and efficient ways. With this in mind, our team worked on bringing forward a novel idea: combining Protein Complementation techniques to Biosensors to achieve fast spatiotemporal analysis of bacterial response to stimuli.

As a proof of concept of this idea, we aimed to develop a BioPad: a biological TouchPad made of touch responsive bacteria in a microfluidic chip allowing the control of electronic devices. This was done by engineering the Cpx Pathway – a two component regulatory system responsive to periplasmic stress.


Why a BioPad ?

Microfluidics

The biological concepts behind the BioPad project have applications both in basic and applied sciences. From a purely scientific perspective, the ideas introduced and implemented by our project are novel and promising for future applications. The BioPad is also an attractive concept that is tangible for the general public and will allow people to look at synthetic biology in a different way. Hence, the combination of novel biological concepts, a cool idea, and the community awareness that our project provides, makes the BioPad project perfect for iGEM !



The BioPad's applications in a nutshell

With respect to basic sciences, our system serves as a good proof that protein complementation techniques are suitable for applications in the context of biosensors – especially for two component regulatory systems. The introduction of the split IFP1.4 into the registry will allow future iGEM and research teams to take advantages of the reversibility and precision of this protein. Moreover, our work on the Cpx pathway will allow future iGEM teams to make us of other members of the OmpR/PhoB subfamily as well as other two-component regulatory systems in new ways.

As for applied sciences, the potential uses of the BioPad include the delivery of a cheap, fast, efficient, and accurate antibiotic screening systems enabling an easy way to quantify how antibiotics affect the periplasm in gram negative bacteria; the BioPad project could also be the source of an "antibiotic complement" drug allowing could also provide a new way to study genes by allowing the examine the relationship between genes and their corresponding activating signals;

- TALK ABOUT THE REST - LESS DETAILS - TALK ABOUT SPEED INCREASE - INTEGRATE MICROFLUIDICS + YEAST - PUT IN LINKS FOR OTHER PAGES

MEET OUR TEAM

We are a group of 14 students from the faculties of Life, Biomechanical, and Computer Sciences, and are supervised by 2 EPFL professors, 1 Lecturer and 5 PhD students.

  • Ted Baldwin

    “I’m pretty confident that it should work.”

     

  • Içvara Barbier

    “010000110110111 101101110011011 100110000101110 01001100100”

     

  • Romane Breysse

    “I'll be 5/8 of an hour late”

     

  • Jin Chang

    Bachelor Life Sciences

     

  • Axel de Tonnac

    “I forgot to eat today”

     

  • Bastien Duckert

    "I can't do sh*t with I'm sorry"

     

  • Arthur Giroux

    * Insert one of his random and very strange quotes *

     

  • Nikolaus Huwiler

    “Imagine a world where technology is alive”

     

  • Sakura Nussbaum

    "Hello"

     

  • Lucie Petetin

    "Ooh, it's sooo cuuute"

     

  • Cécile Piot

    “The PCR didn't work... again”

     

  • Ione Pla

    “How about no”

     

  • Grégoire Repond

    Parafilm specialist

     

  • Thomas Simonet

    ''Oh no, there are no chocolate muffins left''

     

  • Maroun Bousleiman

    "This is my limit; look, I'm not smart, I'm not funny"

     

  • Oleg Mikhajlov

    "Is everything alright, guys?"

     

  • Ekatarina Petrova

    Thingy = coalenterazine

     

  • Rachana Pradhan

    "We [the TAs] also have a life!"

     

  • Antonio Meireles Filho

    Phd Life Sciences

     

  • Prof. Bart Deplancke

    "Make a list"

     

  • Dr. Barbara Grisoni-Neupert

    “Do you talk about iGem when you meet the guys?”

     

  • Prof. Sebastian Maerkl

    “I'm thinking about science”

     

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