Team:Oxford/achievements
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Revision as of 09:45, 17 July 2014
Achievements
Week 1 Day 3 - Major Breakthrough
Finished the first draft of the model, will leave it until we have real data to feed back into the system. The model is very robust and allows any user to input a large variety of parameters and scenarios that could be realistically expected in the laboratory results. The output of the model is the colour that you can expect over time (the outputs of the real system will be from a combination of mCherry and GFP).
The model reveals surprising results, including how even a small basal rate of gene expression (due to leakage of the promoters) can really change the results.
The way that I finally got the model to work was by returning to the ODE15s function in Matlab and not bothering with Laplace transforms. Information on how to use Matlab to model repressor and activator networks very easily, accurately and quickly will be uploaded to this wiki soon! If you want more details please don't hesitate to contact us.
Week 1 Day 2 -
Today was spent trying to get the
Week 1 Day 1 - Conceptualizing part B
The morning was spent with Glen and Fran (who are working on part B) discussing exactly what network of activation and repression we were trying to categorize and turning it from Snapgene files (that the Biochemists understand) into a series of possible repression and activation scenarios. Then