Difference between revisions of "Team:Freiburg"

Line 8: Line 8:
  
 
<div class="column full_size" >
 
<div class="column full_size" >
<h5> Home to Freiburg </h5>
+
<h5> Welcome on the Team-Wiki from iGEM Freiburg 2016
<p>'cause spore is more!<br>
+
On the following pages we want to show you how we use Bacillus subtilis endospores to reduce the side effects of systemically distributed medication.
After a ton of ideas and a lot of brainstorming, we decided to work with bacteria and spores this summer. More specifically, we are focusing on the organism Bacillus subtilis. B. subtilis is a gram-positive, aerobically growing bacterium, which is easy, safe and cheap to handle in the laboratory. Under nutrient deficient circumstances, they form so-called endospores.  
+
Click on the menus to get more information or follow Spori trought a guided tour.  
These are highly resistant to heat, cold, radiation and enzymatic attacks. Our goal is to unlock the hidden potential of the spores and to engineer them for the display of binding proteins and functional enzymes on their surfaces directed against structures of our choice. Those binding properties can be used to specifically target disease-associated cells and undesirable bacteria. </p>
+
</h5>
 +
<p>
 +
</p>
  
 
</div>  
 
</div>  

Revision as of 14:54, 22 August 2016


Welcome on the Team-Wiki from iGEM Freiburg 2016 On the following pages we want to show you how we use Bacillus subtilis endospores to reduce the side effects of systemically distributed medication. Click on the menus to get more information or follow Spori trought a guided tour.