Team:UCSF UCB

From 2014.igem.org

(Difference between revisions)
Line 87: Line 87:
</td>
</td>
</tr>
</tr>
-
 
</table>
</table>

Revision as of 16:58, 14 August 2014

WELCOME TO iGEM 2014!

Your team has been approved and you are ready to start the iGEM season!
On this page you can document your project, introduce your team members, document your progress
and share your iGEM experience with the rest of the world!


Click here to edit this page!

Home Team Official Team Profile Project Parts Modeling Notebook Safety Attributions

Abstract

Cells in a local population have a wide range of responses to a given stimulus. This noisiness may be due to differences in extracelluar environment, or intracellular molecular makeup. Yet these cells often need to coordinate and respond in a concerted way. For example, all T cells in a lymph node respond to an antigen, yet only those with a strong initial reaction proliferate and effect an immune response. In another example, V. fischeri sense local population levels and require quorum to express bioluminesence. Our project seeks to understand the complex intercellular interactions that must happen to produce such a specific community phenotype. Our goal is to investigate how a group of cells coordinate their behaviors using extracellular signaling by engineering essential coordination motifs.