Difference between revisions of "Team:Marburg/Collaborations"

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            SynDustry <small>Fuse. Use. Produce.</small>
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         <h2>Collaboration connecting Theory and Experiment</h2>
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         <h2>Collaboration: Theory and Experiment</h2>
 
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This year our iGEM team established a transatlantic collaboration with the iGEM team 2016 from <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Lethbridge">Lethbridge</a>, Canada. Our joined attempt was to determine the evolutionary stability of kill switches from both, theoretical and experimental side. While we were contributing the theoretical modeling part, our colleagues in Canada worked on the experimental evidence of our drylab predictions. We worked on suitable experiment design for their hands-on part. To help them out we had also the necessary genes for the MazF killswitch synthesized and shipped. The results of this joint project can be found in our modelling section. We are hoping that this fruitful collaboroation will continue.
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This year our iGEM team established a transatlantic collaboration with the iGEM team 2016 from <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Lethbridge">Lethbridge</a>, Canada. Our joined attempt was to determine the evolutionary stability of kill switches from both, theoretical and experimental side. While we were contributing the theoretical modeling part, our colleagues in Canada worked on the experimental evidence of our drylab predictions. We worked on suitable experiment design for their hands-on part together. To help them out we had also the necessary genes for the MazF kill switch synthesized and shipped. Figure 1 shows
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Revision as of 14:17, 2 December 2016

SynDustry Fuse. Produce. Use.

Projects :: Syndustry - iGEM Marburg 2016

SynDustry Fuse. Use. Produce.

Collaboration: Theory and Experiment

This year our iGEM team established a transatlantic collaboration with the iGEM team 2016 from Lethbridge, Canada. Our joined attempt was to determine the evolutionary stability of kill switches from both, theoretical and experimental side. While we were contributing the theoretical modeling part, our colleagues in Canada worked on the experimental evidence of our drylab predictions. We worked on suitable experiment design for their hands-on part together. To help them out we had also the necessary genes for the MazF kill switch synthesized and shipped. Figure 1 shows