Difference between revisions of "Team:EPFL"

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                    <div class="caption">
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                        <h6>Creating tools for synthetic genetic network creation</h6>
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                        <h1>
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                            <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/f/ff/Logo_intelligene_medium.png" alt="INTELLIGENE" style="max-width: 350px;" />
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                        </h1>
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                        <a class="goto" href="#"><i class="fa fa-angle-down"></i></a>
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        <div class="simple-page">
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            <section class="lightGray features">
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                <div class="container">
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                            <p class="index-prompts text-center">
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                                If you could <b>reprogram</b> your cells, what would you make them do?
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<img src="http://placehold.it/800x300/d3d3d3/f2f2f2">
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                            <p class="index-prompts text-center">
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                                A <b>multi-biosensor</b> for soil contamination?
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                            </p>
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                        </div>
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                        <div class="reponse col-md-5 col-md-pull-4">
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                            <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/7/7d/Biosensor.png" alt="" class="index-img"/>
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                    </div>
  
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<h2> Welcome to iGEM 2016! </h2>
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                    <div class="row vertical-align">
<p>Your team has been approved and you are ready to start the iGEM season! </p>
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<h5>Before you start: </h5>
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                                Cells that can <b>count</b>?
<p> Please read the following pages:</p>
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                            </p>
<ul>
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                        </div>
<li>  <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Requirements">Requirements page </a> </li>
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                        <div class="col-md-5">
<li> <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Wiki_How-To">Wiki Requirements page</a></li>
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                            <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/1/15/Cellcounting.png" alt="" class="index-img"/>
<li> <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Resources/Template_Documentation"> Template Documentation </a></li>
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                        </div>
</ul>
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<div class="column half_size" >
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<div class="highlight">
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<h5> Styling your wiki </h5>
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<p>You may style this page as you like or you can simply leave the style as it is. You can easily keep the styling and edit the content of these default wiki pages with your project information and completely fulfill the requirement to document your project.</p>
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<p>While you may not win Best Wiki with this styling, your team is still eligible for all other awards. This default wiki meets the requirements, it improves navigability and ease of use for visitors, and you should not feel it is necessary to style beyond what has been provided.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="column full_size" >
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<h5> Wiki template information </h5>
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<p>We have created these wiki template pages to help you get started and to help you think about how your team will be evaluated. You can find a list of all the pages tied to awards here at the <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Judging/Pages_for_Awards/Instructions">Pages for awards</a> link. You must edit these pages to be evaluated for medals and awards, but ultimately the design, layout, style and all other elements of your team wiki is up to you!</p>
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<div class="column half_size" >
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<h5> Editing your wiki </h5>
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<p>On this page you can document your project, introduce your team members, document your progress and share your iGEM experience with the rest of the world! </p>
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<p> <a href="https://2016.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Team:Example&action=edit"> Click here to edit this page! </a></p>
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</div>
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<div class="column half_size" >
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<h5>Tips</h5>
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<p>This wiki will be your team’s first interaction with the rest of the world, so here are a few tips to help you get started: </p>
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<ul>
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<li>State your accomplishments! Tell people what you have achieved from the start. </li>
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<li>Be clear about what you are doing and how you plan to do this.</li>
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<li>You have a global audience! Consider the different backgrounds that your users come from.</li>
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<li>Make sure information is easy to find; nothing should be more than 3 clicks away.  </li>
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<li>Avoid using very small fonts and low contrast colors; information should be easy to read.  </li>
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<li>Start documenting your project as early as possible; don’t leave anything to the last minute before the Wiki Freeze. For a complete list of deadlines visit the <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Calendar">iGEM 2016 calendar</a> </li>
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<li>Have lots of fun! </li>
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</ul>
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</div>
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<div class="column half_size" >
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<h5>Inspiration</h5>
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<p> You can also view other team wikis for inspiration! Here are some examples:</p>
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<ul>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:SDU-Denmark/"> 2014 SDU Denmark </a> </li>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki">2014 Aalto-Helsinki</a> </li>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:LMU-Munich">2014 LMU-Munich</a> </li>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Michigan"> 2014 Michigan</a></li>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:ITESM-Guadalajara">2014 ITESM-Guadalajara </a></li>
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<li> <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:SCU-China"> 2014 SCU-China </a></li>
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</ul>
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</div>
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<div class="column half_size" >
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<h5> Uploading pictures and files </h5>
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<p> You can upload your pictures and files to the iGEM 2016 server. Remember to keep all your pictures and files within your team's namespace or at least include your team's name in the file name. <br />
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When you upload, set the "Destination Filename" to <code>Team:YourOfficialTeamName/NameOfFile.jpg</code>. (If you don't do this, someone else might upload a different file with the same "Destination Filename", and your file would be erased!)</p>
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<div class="button_click"  onClick=" parent.location= 'https://2016.igem.org/Special:Upload '"> 
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UPLOAD FILES
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</div>
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                            <p class="index-prompts text-center">
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                                A medical patch that can <b>heal</b> patients with faulty methabolic pathways?
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                            </p>
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                        </div>
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                        <div class="reponse col-md-5 col-md-pull-4">
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                            <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/6/61/Medecin.png" alt="" class="index-img"/>
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                        </div>
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                            <p class="index-prompts text-center">
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                                Cells that can <b>survive</b> in harsh environements by making complex calculations about their surroundings going where <b>no cells have gone before</b>?
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                            </p>
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                        <div class="col-md-5">
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                            <img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/de/Mars.png" alt="" class="index-img"/>
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        <!-- Welcome
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            ============================================= -->
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                <h2><span>Why </span>genetic circuits ?</h2>
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                    <p class="sub-lead">As synthetic biologists, we are constantly striving to change and understand the world around us. Whether it be the creation of biosensors for drugs or cellular environments, or the creation of new, highly specialized cells, many of the problems facing synthetic biologists today can be solved through the creation of cells with synthetic or partly-synthetic genetic networks. These cells can be taught to make calculations that they have never done before. They can produce new proteins, but also take combinations of inputs and have a predictable output, essentially “making decisions” based on cellular information. The applications are boundless, but this technology is not ready yet. Intelligene represents a concerted effort by a group of students to create new tools - and refine old ones – geared towards the creation of synthetic genetic networks. Follow our journey through a spectacular summer below.
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                    </p>
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                </div>
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            <div class="container">
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                <h2><span>What </span>we did</h2>
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                <hr class="sep">
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                <div class="col-md-10 col-md-offset-1">
  
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                    <p class="sub-lead">Intelligene is best thought of as a suite of tools, combining aspects of computational biology and synthetic biology to help scientists with new dCas9-based genetic circuits, from their design all the way through to their implementation.
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                    </p>
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                    <p class="sub-lead">In order to help with the intelligent and intuitive design of these circuits, we decided to modify a recently-published program called Cello. Cello works by combining information about the circuit the user wants to create, and biological information about the system the user is building the circuit for, with a series of algorithms which produce a plasmid which contains an optimized biological form of that circuit. While we loved the concept and its powerful design, we thought that certain aspects could be built upon to increase user-friendliness and embellish its open-source nature. To this end, we created a new, simple, graphical user interface, and connected Cello with databases we created, which make the information it uses public and easily transferrable between users.
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                    </p>
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                    <p class="sub-lead ">Once a circuit is designed, biological gates are needed to make that circuit. These gates essentially take a simple combination of inputs and produce a given output, according to some rule. Many currently used gates are based on transcription factors, but the use of artificial transcription factors, built using dCas9, is becoming more commonplace as these transcription factors can be reprogrammed to be specific to a certain target and their effect can be fine-tuned by selecting appropriate transcriptional effectors to use within them. During our project we successfully used an architecture first described by Zalatan et al. (2015) to reproduce a previously described activating artificial transcription factor. We also produced two novel repressing artificial transcription factors. Using these parts, we developed two novel NOT gates, each with differing designs.
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{{RISE_foot}}

Latest revision as of 02:43, 20 October 2016

iGEM EPFL 2016

Creating tools for synthetic genetic network creation

INTELLIGENE

If you could reprogram your cells, what would you make them do?

A multi-biosensor for soil contamination?

Cells that can count?

A medical patch that can heal patients with faulty methabolic pathways?

Cells that can survive in harsh environements by making complex calculations about their surroundings going where no cells have gone before?

Why genetic circuits ?


As synthetic biologists, we are constantly striving to change and understand the world around us. Whether it be the creation of biosensors for drugs or cellular environments, or the creation of new, highly specialized cells, many of the problems facing synthetic biologists today can be solved through the creation of cells with synthetic or partly-synthetic genetic networks. These cells can be taught to make calculations that they have never done before. They can produce new proteins, but also take combinations of inputs and have a predictable output, essentially “making decisions” based on cellular information. The applications are boundless, but this technology is not ready yet. Intelligene represents a concerted effort by a group of students to create new tools - and refine old ones – geared towards the creation of synthetic genetic networks. Follow our journey through a spectacular summer below.

What we did


Intelligene is best thought of as a suite of tools, combining aspects of computational biology and synthetic biology to help scientists with new dCas9-based genetic circuits, from their design all the way through to their implementation.

In order to help with the intelligent and intuitive design of these circuits, we decided to modify a recently-published program called Cello. Cello works by combining information about the circuit the user wants to create, and biological information about the system the user is building the circuit for, with a series of algorithms which produce a plasmid which contains an optimized biological form of that circuit. While we loved the concept and its powerful design, we thought that certain aspects could be built upon to increase user-friendliness and embellish its open-source nature. To this end, we created a new, simple, graphical user interface, and connected Cello with databases we created, which make the information it uses public and easily transferrable between users.

Once a circuit is designed, biological gates are needed to make that circuit. These gates essentially take a simple combination of inputs and produce a given output, according to some rule. Many currently used gates are based on transcription factors, but the use of artificial transcription factors, built using dCas9, is becoming more commonplace as these transcription factors can be reprogrammed to be specific to a certain target and their effect can be fine-tuned by selecting appropriate transcriptional effectors to use within them. During our project we successfully used an architecture first described by Zalatan et al. (2015) to reproduce a previously described activating artificial transcription factor. We also produced two novel repressing artificial transcription factors. Using these parts, we developed two novel NOT gates, each with differing designs.