Difference between revisions of "Team:TU Darmstadt/Attributions"

 
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<p><h5>With a spezial thank to a few iGEM-Teams whose work helped us a lot.</h5></p><br>
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<p><h5 style="padding-top:0;">A Huge <i>THANK YOU</i> Goes to These iGEM Teams </h5></p>
<p>We would like to thank the <font color=#019ac8>University of Göttingen</font> for helping us testing our miniColicin in other organisms than E. coli, as well as <font color=#019ac8>RWTH Aachen</font> for trying to help us with the assembly and characterisation of out orthogonal pair. It was great fun to work with you! </p>
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<p>We would like to thank <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:TU_Darmstadt/Collaborations"><font color=#019ac8>iGEM Göttingen</font></a> for helping us to test Minicolicin in other organisms than <i>E. coli</i>, as well as <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:TU_Darmstadt/Collaborations"><font color=#019ac8>iGEM Aachen</font></a> for trying to help us with the assembly and characterisation of the orthogonal pair. We had a lot of nice Skype sessions and it was great fun to work with you! </p>
<p>We would like to thank the iGEM team of <font color=#019ac8>Texas at Austin</font> as well for constructing their ONBY-orthogonal-pair, we used as template for our own OMT-orthogonal-pair. </p>
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<p>We would like to thank the iGEM team of <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Austin_Texas/kit"><font color=#019ac8>Texas at Austin</font></a> as well for constructing their ONBY (<i>o</i>&#8209;nitrobenzyl&#8209;O&#8209;tyrosine) orthogonal pair. We used the open reading frame (ORF) as template and replaced the coding sequences with our own sequences. This helped us with constructing our plasmid, thank you for this work.</p>
<p>We want to thank the iGEM team of <font color=#019ac8>Munich</font> for the good collaboration with the syringe pump</p>
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<p>We want to thank the iGEM team of <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:TU_Darmstadt/Collaborations"><font color=#019ac8>Munich</font></a> for the good collaboration regarding the syringe pump. You sent us your pump so we could compare it to ours and get some more ideas!</p>
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<p>We also want to thank the iGEM team from <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Duesseldorf/Outreach#Postcards"><font color=#019ac8>D&#252;sseldorf</font></a> for organising a collaboration of eight iGEM teams in Germany. All of us designed postcards with biotechnological topics to raise public awareness. We appreciate the effort and hope that this postcard distribution will make people more familiar to synthetic biology! </p>
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<p>Finally a special tribute goes to <font color=#019ac8>iGEM Marburg</font> for arranging the german iGEM meet&#8209;up. We all had much fun there, got to know other iGEM team members and are looking forward to see everyone we met there on the Giant Jamboree!</p>
<p><h5>The Munich syringe pump</h5></p>
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<p>One part of our robot is a do-it-yourself syringe pump which we constructed and 3D printed on our
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own. Also the iGEM team of Munich had the idea to work with syringe pumps. They want to
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construct a feature to easily upgrade a 3D printer to a bio printer. The essential part for this
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transformation is a syringe pump, they constructed. Since our robot basis is a 3D printer and we
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also use a syringe pump it was natural to work together. Munich sent us their system and we printed
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the additional parts on our own. This is exactly how they imagine their system. We tested it and
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gave them feedback on their design and possible challenges, so they can improve their design. For
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us it was useful to test the multi purpose of our robot and how easy it is to add new parts and
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features. Also the syringe pump design is different and we had a good chance to evaluate our design
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and compare it to the one of Munich.
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We derived useful information within this collaboration and are interested in working closer
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together in the technical part of the iGEM project. Especially if Munich decides to go on focusing
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on the do-it-yourself sector, Darmstadt is related to.
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We like to thank the iGEM team of Munich for this opportunity and wish them success with their
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project. Keep on working :)</p>
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Latest revision as of 23:57, 19 October 2016

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iGEM TU Darmstadt 2016

ATTRIBUTIONS

A Huge THANK YOU Goes to These iGEM Teams

We would like to thank iGEM Göttingen for helping us to test Minicolicin in other organisms than E. coli, as well as iGEM Aachen for trying to help us with the assembly and characterisation of the orthogonal pair. We had a lot of nice Skype sessions and it was great fun to work with you!

We would like to thank the iGEM team of Texas at Austin as well for constructing their ONBY (o‑nitrobenzyl‑O‑tyrosine) orthogonal pair. We used the open reading frame (ORF) as template and replaced the coding sequences with our own sequences. This helped us with constructing our plasmid, thank you for this work.

We want to thank the iGEM team of Munich for the good collaboration regarding the syringe pump. You sent us your pump so we could compare it to ours and get some more ideas!

We also want to thank the iGEM team from Düsseldorf for organising a collaboration of eight iGEM teams in Germany. All of us designed postcards with biotechnological topics to raise public awareness. We appreciate the effort and hope that this postcard distribution will make people more familiar to synthetic biology!

Finally a special tribute goes to iGEM Marburg for arranging the german iGEM meet‑up. We all had much fun there, got to know other iGEM team members and are looking forward to see everyone we met there on the Giant Jamboree!