Team:GeorgiaTech

From 2014.igem.org

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     <h2 class="onBlack">No, rubber is made in the lab.</h2>
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     <h2 class="onBlack">How can we make these environment saving bacteria?</h2>
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Just days before the deadline of iGEM 2013, we got the peaks that our entire summer built towards: Two small bumps on the NMR indicating the presence of bacterially produced rubber in our strain of E. coli. With a mad scramble to the finish line, our initial indication was reinforced. Click anywhere along this text to start the interactive tour, which will guide you along the path to rubber.
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Our lab is equipped with the tools to synthesize new genetic sequences and generate transgenic bacteria capable of taking methane out of the water, one bubble at a time.
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Revision as of 18:19, 20 June 2014

How does dissolved methane endanger our water?

Look at this running stream and imagine how it would appear when contaminated with methane gas. If you pictured it as a flowing stream of seltzer water, then you're not far off.

The demand for natural gas to fuel growing industries has led to the development and increased use of fracking techniques to extract methane and other natural gases from shale outcroppings deep in the Earth's crust. These outcroppings often lie underneath freshwater aquifers, and when disturbed can release gases into the water supply posing health concerns for water well owners.

Our project aims to enable E. coli to produce soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) a protein capable of converting methane into less volatile methanol, which can then be treated by further remediation pathways.

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