Team:BostonU/Acknowledgements
From 2014.igem.org
CIDAR Lab |
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Professor Douglas DensmorePrimary Investigator, CIDAR Lab at Boston UniversityWe would like to thank Professor Densmore for his lab space and his support throughout the summer. |
Dr. Ernst OberortnerPostdoctoral Researcher, CIDAR Lab at Boston UniversityWe would also like to thank Dr. Ernst Oberortner for his help with Eugene and the priority encoder design. |
Academic Collaborations
Orit ShaerPrimary Investigator, HCI Lab at Wellesley CollegeWe would like to thank Professor Orit Shaer for teaching us more about Bio-design Automation and for allowing us to collaborate with her lab to learn more about integrating computational tools with experimental lab work. We would also like to thank the Human Computer Interaction (HCI) lab at Wellesley for allowing us to use the Google Glass in our lab. |
Ariela EsmurriaWe would like to thank high school student Ariela Esmurria for helping us with the Interlab study. |
Diego Cuerda GilWe would like to thank Diego Cuerda Gil for his help in finishing cloning origins of replication. |
Corporate Collaborations |
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Dr. Jacob BealBBN Technologies We would like to thank Dr. Jacob Beal from BBN Technologies for teaching us how to use the BBN Synthetic Biology TASBE Tools and helping us troubleshoot the software if an error happened. |
Contributions |
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The wetlab work was completed by Yash Agarwal (fusion proteins), Alan Pacheco (new vector backbones), and Katie Lewis (tandem promoters). Our advisor, Traci Haddock, and our mentor, Evan Appleton, trained us in the lab and provided us troubleshooting advice throughout the project. All team members and advisors contributed to the wiki. Alan designed the wiki framework. Ariela Esmurria, a high school student volunteer, did the wetlab work for the Interlab Study.
The genetic device graphics were all generated from Pigeon. Bhatia, S. & Densmore, D. Pigeon: a design visualizer for synthetic biology. ACS Synth. Biol. 2, 348–350 (2013). |
Sponsors |
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We'd like to thank all of our sponsors for their generous support. Without the support from the following Boston University departments and corporate sponsors, we would not have been able to compete in iGEM. We would specifically like to thank:
Thank you very much! Without your generous support, this project would not have been possible! |