Team:Warwick/Team2

From 2014.igem.org

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<td><img src='https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2013/2/21/Steinbock.png' alt='William' height='200px' width="200" style="margin: 0px 250px opx 0px"></td>
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<td> William Rostain is a current PhD student working in the Jaramillo laboratory developing synthetic phages for future antibiotic therapy, he earned his BSc in Edinburgh in Biology and has been involved in three iGEM teams as both a student and advisor, earning gold with additional prizes in each one, in the undergraduate and postgraduate category.
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<td> William Rostain was a supervisor. He is a current PhD student working in the Jaramillo laboratory developing RNA switches and synthetic phages for future antibiotic therapy, he earned his BSc in Edinburgh in Biology and has been involved in three iGEM teams as both a student and advisor, earning gold with additional prizes in each one, in the undergraduate and postgraduate category.
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Revision as of 23:49, 17 October 2014

photo of HassanHassan is a Mathematician at Warwick and inadvertently found himself leader of the team and resident travel agent. He also took a firm hand in organising and keeping on top of the team while developing models for many of the parts in the meantime. Unfortunately developing an allergic reaction to a tree he had come "very close to touching" outside the lab he refused to dine al fresco with the rest of the team on the (rare) hot summer days.
photo of WaqWaq is a student at Warwick following an Undergraduate degree at the same uni. He is studying under supervisors Miriam Gifford and Vardis Ntoukakis, investigating the hidden mechanisms of innate immunity. He was mainly involved in the experimental side of the project, the interlab study and human practices. Also provided entertainment, wearing inappropriate clothes in the harshly air-conditioned computer lab and his questionable drawing skills.
photo of LeoLeo is a 2nd year student studying Biochemistry at Warwick, hailing from all over the midlands. He was key to sponsorship, obtaining sponsorship for gloves, laboratory reagents and other samples needed for work.
photo of ChrisChris is studying Physics at Warwick and was our honorary computer scientist taking the wiki by storm. He was also a major part in our data analysis and was driven almost insane by biologists and their "continuous lack of enough repeats and far too many abbreviations".
photo of IvaIva has ventured furthest from home, coming from Bulgaria and is studying Engineering at Warwick looking to specialise into biomedical engineering post uni. She took a shine to the lab work deeming everything "so adorable" and kept a meticulous lab book where you could find anything and everything experiment related. She was infinitely helpful, coming in at weekends and staying late every evening in order to complete the tasks at hand and studying for her exams alongside.
photo of DanAfter briefly lapsing his strong vegan beliefs and accepting the use of fetal bovine serum and calf intestinal alkaline phosphatase in the lab he took charge of the measurement study and put his controversial views to good use at the forefront of our human practice ventures. He spurned interesting and heated debates about the project and its applications as well as its environmental impacts.
photo of ChelseyChelsey is currently studying in Chemistry following a 3 year undergraduate course in Chemical Biology at Warwick. She helped Dan in them measurement study and human practices area.
photo of CarrieCarrie studies biomedical science at Warwick and played a major role in the experimental side of the project. She was particularly crucial to the testing in human cells which she particularly enjoyed and successfully tested the IRESs and the aptazyme following some set backs in transfection. Despite her tendency to fall asleep unannounced she played a key role in the experimental planning and aquiring of results.
photo of BeckyBecky studies biomedical sciences at Warwick university and is in her final year. Becky took on a major role in the experimetal work.
photo of BenBen was king of the modelling, taking major steps forward in the development of both stochastic and deterministic models as well as creating a programme to speed up the analysis of plates measured in the tecan, instructions for and details of which can be found in the modelling section of our wiki.
photo of AlfonsoAlfonso was our PI with a PhD in theoretical Physics he moved over to Synthetic Biology, shortly after which he involved himself in iGEM in 2006 and has never looked back. His group is currently engineering a synthetic phage, developing directed evolution technologies and engineering novel RNA devices.
photo of SianSian was our secondary supervisor with a PhD in plant biological clocks she aided in experimental design and kept us on track giving us our initial safety briefing and crash course in cloning.
William William Rostain was a supervisor. He is a current PhD student working in the Jaramillo laboratory developing RNA switches and synthetic phages for future antibiotic therapy, he earned his BSc in Edinburgh in Biology and has been involved in three iGEM teams as both a student and advisor, earning gold with additional prizes in each one, in the undergraduate and postgraduate category.