Difference between revisions of "Team:Slovenia/Safety"

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{{Slovenia}}
 
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<b>Collaboration</b>
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<b>Safety</b>
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<h1 class = "ui left dividing header"><span class="section colorize">nbsp;</span>Safety</h1>
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<p>Department of synthetic biology and immunology of the National Institute of Chemistry (NIC) where we did the experimental work is classified as Biosafety level 1.  
 
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All of the bacterial and mammalian cell lines we were working with (DH5alpha, TOP10, NiCo21(DE3)pLysS, HEK293, HEK293T, neuro-2A) belong to risk group 1, which means they do not cause disease in healthy adult humans and therefore pose minimal potential hazard to laboratory personnel. The same goes for all the organisms from which
 
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our parts originate.
<p>Please visit <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Safety">the main Safety page</a> to find this year's safety requirements & deadlines, and to learn about safe & responsible research in iGEM.</p>
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</p>  
 
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<p>For handling the biological material different work areas with different safety requirements were used.  Work with bacteria took place mostly in general, open
<p>On this page of your wiki, you should write about how you are addressing any safety issues in your project. The wiki is a place where you can <strong>go beyond the questions on the safety forms</strong>, and write about whatever safety topics are most interesting in your project. (You do not need to copy your safety forms onto this wiki page.)</p>
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bench lab. Standard safety precautions were followed: work area was cleaned with 70% ethanol before and after work, safety equipment, including long pants, close-toed
 
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shoes, lab coats and gloves were worn at all times, all GMO waste was deactivated and properly discarded, the lab was physically separated from the rest of the building
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to prevent the spread of GMOs and those were carried around only in specified closed containers. Most of the work was completed in sterile conditions. In other
 
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work areas the same safety precautions were followed and additional ones if needed. All dangerous chemicals (TEMED, acrylamide, organic solvents, beta-mercaptoethanol…)
 
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were handled in chemical fume hoods. For work with ethidium bromide we had a designated gel electrophoresis lab with specific safety rules. The lab had separate
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''clean'' and ''contaminated'' areas. No material that had been in the ''contaminated'' area was to be taken out of that lab. Stronger nitrile gloves had to be worn
<h5>Safe Project Design</h5>
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all the time and the lab had designated equipment that could not be taken outside. Mammalian cells were handled in a designated cell lab with laminar flow hoods, where
 
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special equipment (including specific lab coats, hairnets and disposable shoe covers) had to be worn.
<p>Does your project include any safety features? Have you made certain decisions about the design to reduce risks? Write about them here! For example:</p>
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</p>  
 
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<p>All members of our team who performed experiments have extensive wet lab experience and were trained and tested in lab safety, both general and GMO specific.
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General safety training was provided by the head of Work safety service of NIC and the person responsible for keeping and
<li>Choosing a non-pathogenic chassis</li>
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implementation of containment measures for our laboratory. Training in GMO safety was provided by the commissioner for biosafety at NIC.  Furthermore, each
<li>Choosing parts that will not harm humans / animals / plants</li>
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member of the team received one-on-one practical training before working in designated areas (such as proper safety precautions when working in the cell lab
<li>Substituting safer materials for dangerous materials in a proof-of-concept experiment</li>
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or in agarose gel electrophoresis lab).
<li>Including an "induced lethality" or "kill-switch" device</li>
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</p>  
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<p>The safety guidelines concerning GMOs in our lab are in accordance with <a href="http://ec.europa.eu/food/plant/gmo/legislation/index_en.htm">European</a>  
 
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and <a href="http://www.uradni-list.si/1/objava.jsp?sop=2005-01-0780">Slovenian</a> legislature with additional <a href="http://www.uradni-list.si/1/objava.jsp?urlid=201021&stevilka=882">amendments</a>.
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<h5>Safe Lab Work</h5>
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<p>What safety procedures do you use every day in the lab? Did you perform any unusual experiments, or face any unusual safety issues? Write about them here!</p>
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<h5>Safe Shipment</h5>
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<p>Did you face any safety problems in sending your DNA parts to the Registry? How did you solve those problems?</p>
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Latest revision as of 09:17, 19 October 2016

Safety

nbsp;Safety

Department of synthetic biology and immunology of the National Institute of Chemistry (NIC) where we did the experimental work is classified as Biosafety level 1. All of the bacterial and mammalian cell lines we were working with (DH5alpha, TOP10, NiCo21(DE3)pLysS, HEK293, HEK293T, neuro-2A) belong to risk group 1, which means they do not cause disease in healthy adult humans and therefore pose minimal potential hazard to laboratory personnel. The same goes for all the organisms from which our parts originate.

For handling the biological material different work areas with different safety requirements were used. Work with bacteria took place mostly in general, open bench lab. Standard safety precautions were followed: work area was cleaned with 70% ethanol before and after work, safety equipment, including long pants, close-toed shoes, lab coats and gloves were worn at all times, all GMO waste was deactivated and properly discarded, the lab was physically separated from the rest of the building to prevent the spread of GMOs and those were carried around only in specified closed containers. Most of the work was completed in sterile conditions. In other work areas the same safety precautions were followed and additional ones if needed. All dangerous chemicals (TEMED, acrylamide, organic solvents, beta-mercaptoethanol…) were handled in chemical fume hoods. For work with ethidium bromide we had a designated gel electrophoresis lab with specific safety rules. The lab had separate ''clean'' and ''contaminated'' areas. No material that had been in the ''contaminated'' area was to be taken out of that lab. Stronger nitrile gloves had to be worn all the time and the lab had designated equipment that could not be taken outside. Mammalian cells were handled in a designated cell lab with laminar flow hoods, where special equipment (including specific lab coats, hairnets and disposable shoe covers) had to be worn.

All members of our team who performed experiments have extensive wet lab experience and were trained and tested in lab safety, both general and GMO specific. General safety training was provided by the head of Work safety service of NIC and the person responsible for keeping and implementation of containment measures for our laboratory. Training in GMO safety was provided by the commissioner for biosafety at NIC. Furthermore, each member of the team received one-on-one practical training before working in designated areas (such as proper safety precautions when working in the cell lab or in agarose gel electrophoresis lab).

The safety guidelines concerning GMOs in our lab are in accordance with European and Slovenian legislature with additional amendments.