Team:UCSC

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<p>This page is currently under construction.  <br> Please check back for updates!</p>
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<tr><td colspan="3" bgColor="#FCFDFE" background = "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/e/e4/UCSC_A23_004.jpg"> <h3> An Introduction to Our Project</h3></td></tr>
 
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Revision as of 18:56, 11 July 2014


Click here to edit this page!


Click for the Experiment.com Link to Support Us and Your Logo Could be Here!

...

WELCOME TO THE UCSC WIKI FOR iGEM 2014!

We are excited to introduce you to our project and our team of:
biologists, biochemists,
bioengineers, bioinformaticians,
ethicists and artists.

This page is currently under construction.
Please check back for updates!


Biofuel is growing all around us in grasses and trees, we just haven’t unlocked it yet. Our team wants to give an archea a little push to digest cellulose, the stuff that makes our paper, into biofuel for our engines. Normally a fortress of ligands keeps cellulose under lock and key. To make the cellulose accesible, we need to add an ionic solution to the plant material, which would shrivel up your typical cell. That’s where Haloferax volcanii comes in. H. volcanii is a halophile archea, which means it’s cozy in high salt environments. It may be the agent we need to break down the cellulose and survive the ionic solution. H. volcanii can already make butanol out of cellulose. The only problem is, once it has the butanol H. volcanii keeps processing it into parts for its cell membrane. We want to knock out the right gene so H. volcanii won’t process the butanol. The butanol should then start piling up, and we’ll have biofuel. This biofuel will still emit CO2 but it won’t add new carbon into the climate because its carbon came from plants instead of fossil fuels. Whatever carbon we add to the climate by using biofuel will be reused on the same scale as we grow more plants that will take in CO2. We can effectively shorten the carbon cycle and stop adding to the accumulation of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere