Difference between revisions of "Team:Exeter/Project"

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<p id="pp">Biosafety is an important issue facing synthetic biology and concerns surrounding synthetic organisms escaping into the environment has prompted the development of novel methods of bio-containment. Many iGEM projects that require an organism to be released from the lab use kill switches to address concerns about the effect of GMOs on the environment.  Unfortunately, kill switches - inducible genetic devices that cause cell death - are poorly categorised in the standard registry of genetic parts. There is a distinct lack of quantitative data which prevents them being used with confidence.</p>
 
<p id="pp">Biosafety is an important issue facing synthetic biology and concerns surrounding synthetic organisms escaping into the environment has prompted the development of novel methods of bio-containment. Many iGEM projects that require an organism to be released from the lab use kill switches to address concerns about the effect of GMOs on the environment.  Unfortunately, kill switches - inducible genetic devices that cause cell death - are poorly categorised in the standard registry of genetic parts. There is a distinct lack of quantitative data which prevents them being used with confidence.</p>
  
<p id="pp">Our project seeks to investigate the effectiveness of different types of kill switch, to quantify their robustness after several generations and compare the stability of these devices when integrated into the genome or carried on a plasmid. We hope to improve the standard of biosafety in the synthetic biology community and provide valuable data for the field to move forward.  
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<p id="pp">After talking to individuals from industry and academia about the strengths and limitations of kill switches, we decided to investigate the effectiveness of different types of kill switch, to quantify their robustness after several generations and investigate the possibility for horizontal gene transfer.
  
  
We have developed three types of kill switch; an improved metabolic kill switch which builds on a previous iGEM project , an enzymatic kill switch that uses the production of lysozyme to kill the cell, and DNA degradation mediated by DNAse production.</p>
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We have developed three types of kill switch to cover a broad range of strategies that may be employed in kill switch design; a metabolic kill switch that uses the production of reactive oxygen species to kill the cell, an enzymatic kill switch that uses the production of lysozyme, and DNA degradation mediated by DNAse production. </p>
  
  

Revision as of 14:55, 28 September 2016