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− | <p>The foundation built by Culture Shock opens up a huge amount of potential for Bio-electrics. Applications such as self-healing circuitry and "living" electronic and cell integrated computers no longer seem as implausible and distant as they once did. As a result, we felt obligated as a team to spend a large amount of time considering the potential ethical issues associated with these ideas - the fruits of our labor being our thought experiment which considers four of these key concepts, with each having | + | <p>The foundation built by Culture Shock opens up a huge amount of potential for Bio-electrics. Applications such as self-healing circuitry and "living" electronic and cell integrated computers no longer seem as implausible and distant as they once did. As a result, we felt obligated as a team to spend a large amount of time considering the potential ethical issues associated with these ideas - the fruits of our labor being our thought experiment which considers four of these key concepts, with each having its own level. You can <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Newcastle/HP/Thought_Experiment">play through the entire thought experiment here</a> or alternatively<a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Newcastle/Human_Practices"> read up on our entire human practices work here.</a> </p> |
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Revision as of 15:12, 15 October 2016
Newcastle iGEM 2016
Scroll down to learn more about our Culture Shock project
Our Motivation
Electronic engineering has given us the television and the mobile phone, while genetic engineering has afforded us mass-scale antimalarial drugs, biofuels and an enormous range of biosensors.
More than a decade ago, Tom Knight and colleagues envisioned using 'BioBricks' to standardise synthetic biological parts. Here at Newcastle we want to return to iGEM's humble origins and come full circle. We are currently working on replacing traditional electronic components with biological alternatives. Building a series of new compatible bacterial components, we can mix and match to create electro-biological components within a breadboard.
The circuit will allow synthetic biologists to combine bacterial and electronic components to create electro-biological circuits, offering an exciting new fusion of synthetic biology and computer science. The ultimate goal is to attain consistent outputs for given inputs.
Our Achievements
- Designed new parts and documented them and their components in the iGEM registry.
- Collaborated with a number of teams and attended meet-ups in the UK and in Europe.
- Run school taster days to get 16 & 17 year olds interested in synthetic biology.
- Talked to researchers in the field and explored the ethical impact of our work.
- Submitted corrections to sequences in the registry and built on the work of past iGEM teams like Tokyo-NoKoGen 2011's use of metallothioneins and the Bielfeld 2013 team's use of porins in microbial fuel cells.
- Participated in the 2016 InterLab task completing both the plate reader and flow cytometry data collection.
- Written software to explore different aspects of our work, including how it would integrate into an electric circuit and to use as a thought experiment in exploring the ethics of our work.
- Built a 'plug 'n' play' breadboard kit to show how we imagine our components being used in the real world.
- Had a great summer!
What Next?
The foundation built by Culture Shock opens up a huge amount of potential for Bio-electrics. Applications such as self-healing circuitry and "living" electronic and cell integrated computers no longer seem as implausible and distant as they once did. As a result, we felt obligated as a team to spend a large amount of time considering the potential ethical issues associated with these ideas - the fruits of our labor being our thought experiment which considers four of these key concepts, with each having its own level. You can play through the entire thought experiment here or alternatively read up on our entire human practices work here.