Difference between revisions of "Team:Newcastle/Collaborations"

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<p><a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Exeter/Collaborations#section_1">Team Exeter</a> kindly helped us by conducting thermal conductivity experiments on LB and M9 media. These were important in allowing us to correctly model the temperature change caused by running an electric current through common bacterial growth media. They found that the conductivity of both <a href="">M9</a> and <a href="">LB</a> to be very similar to that of water. Whilst water has a thermal conductivity of 598.4 mW/Km (miliwatts per metre kelvin) at room temperature Exeter found that LB has a slightly higher thermal conductivity at 605 (+/- 20) mW/Km and M9 a slightly lower thermal conductivity of 570 (+/- 30) mW/Km.</p>
 
<p><a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Exeter/Collaborations#section_1">Team Exeter</a> kindly helped us by conducting thermal conductivity experiments on LB and M9 media. These were important in allowing us to correctly model the temperature change caused by running an electric current through common bacterial growth media. They found that the conductivity of both <a href="">M9</a> and <a href="">LB</a> to be very similar to that of water. Whilst water has a thermal conductivity of 598.4 mW/Km (miliwatts per metre kelvin) at room temperature Exeter found that LB has a slightly higher thermal conductivity at 605 (+/- 20) mW/Km and M9 a slightly lower thermal conductivity of 570 (+/- 30) mW/Km.</p>
 
<p>This data was incorporated into <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Newcastle/Notebook/Lab/Modelling/">our modelling</a> and helped us identify which media to use in our later conductivity experiments. It also gave us some useful pointers for exploring other fluids with different specific heat capacities. Thanks Exeter!</p>
 
<p>This data was incorporated into <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Newcastle/Notebook/Lab/Modelling/">our modelling</a> and helped us identify which media to use in our later conductivity experiments. It also gave us some useful pointers for exploring other fluids with different specific heat capacities. Thanks Exeter!</p>
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<h2>European iGEM Meetup</h2>
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<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/5/50/T--Newcastle--ReadyWithPosterParis.png" alt="Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup." /><figcaption>Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>This years, <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Community/Meetups#Paris">European iGEM Meetup</a> was hosted by teams EVRY and IONIS in Paris. Some of our team members attended this event which consisted of a poster session on the Saturday morning where we presented our project and started to identify other teams who were working on similar projects or who might need access to equipment we had for collaboration. We got lots of good feedback on our project, and particularly our poster design, which lead to it being redesigned for the later Westminster Meetup. In the afternoon there were two round table dicussions with members of the synthetic biology community. Of particular interest to us was the talk on biosecurity which contained useful information on considerations for our human practices around biosecurity and introduced us to the concept of 'dual purpose' constructs which is something we <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Newcastle/Notebook/Safety">discuss further in our safety work</a>.</p>
  
 
<h2 id="Westminster">Westminster Meetup</h2>
 
<h2 id="Westminster">Westminster Meetup</h2>
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<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/7/70/T--Newcastle--EdinburghMeetUpAll.png" alt="Everyone in attendance at the Edinburgh iGEM Meet Up." /><figcaption>Us, and the other iGEM teams who attened the Northen iGEM Meetup held in Edinburgh.</figcaption></figure>
 
<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/7/70/T--Newcastle--EdinburghMeetUpAll.png" alt="Everyone in attendance at the Edinburgh iGEM Meet Up." /><figcaption>Us, and the other iGEM teams who attened the Northen iGEM Meetup held in Edinburgh.</figcaption></figure>
  
<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/a/a5/T--Newcastle--Presenting-at-Edinburgh.png" alt="Us presenting at the Edinburgh iGEM Meet Up." /><figcaption>Our team presenting at the Northern iGEM Meetup in Edinburgh.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>The Northern iGEM Meetup was held on the 29<sup>th</sup> of July at the University of Edinburgh. This was an opportunity for teams from Scotland and Northern England to get together and present on the work they had done so far. As we had not completed many experiments at this point we presented a similar presentation to that one we delivered to sixth form students at our schools taster day for syntehtic biology. We thought this would be a good opportunity to start on our human practices work and so covered information about our project and where we can see our research and ideas in the coming years. We also made sure to pose some important ethical issues that we had been encoutering in our project to the audience in order to guage their responses.</p>
  
<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/d8/T--Newcastle--EdinburghInNewcastle.png" alt="Us having a meal with Edinburgh when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration." /><figcaption>Us and the Edinburgh team having a meal when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>We also used the Northern Meetup to look for new collaboration opportunities. It was here we met <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Edinburgh_UG">the Edinburgh undergraduate iGEM team</a>. Like us they were working on a project interfacing bacteria and eletronics, in this case on creating a modular system for storing data in DNA. Also like us, they had encountered problems explaining their work to other people and getting feedback from them. This was particulalry important to them as the end-product of their technology is a system useable by consumers.</p>
  
<figure><img src="https://2016.igem.org/File:T--Newcastle--ReadyWithPosterParis.png" alt="Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup." /><figcaption>Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup.</figcaption></figure>
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<p>We explained to them that we were creating a computer game based ‘thought experiment’ designed to stimulate discussion around the consequences of using our technology as part of our human practices and offered to integrate their storage system into our thought experiment so that they could use it to get feedback. They thought this was an excellent idea and we invited them down to Newcastle to meet with us and discuss how they wanted their system to be presented within our 'thougt experiment'.</p>
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<h2 id="Edinburgh">Edinburgh</h2>
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<figure><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/d/d8/T--Newcastle--EdinburghInNewcastle.png" alt="Us having a meal with Edinburgh when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration." /><figcaption>Us and the Edinburgh team having a meal when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration.</figcaption></figure>
  
 
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Revision as of 11:46, 16 October 2016

Collaboration

Over the course of the summer we have collaborated with a number of different iGEM teams and attended a number of different events including iGEM meetups at home in the UK and abroad in Europe. As well as conferences, like IWBDA, where we discussed our project with researchers in the field to gather their thoughts and feedback. We have documented these collaborations below.

Exeter

Team Exeter kindly helped us by conducting thermal conductivity experiments on LB and M9 media. These were important in allowing us to correctly model the temperature change caused by running an electric current through common bacterial growth media. They found that the conductivity of both M9 and LB to be very similar to that of water. Whilst water has a thermal conductivity of 598.4 mW/Km (miliwatts per metre kelvin) at room temperature Exeter found that LB has a slightly higher thermal conductivity at 605 (+/- 20) mW/Km and M9 a slightly lower thermal conductivity of 570 (+/- 30) mW/Km.

This data was incorporated into our modelling and helped us identify which media to use in our later conductivity experiments. It also gave us some useful pointers for exploring other fluids with different specific heat capacities. Thanks Exeter!

European iGEM Meetup

Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup.
Us, poster at the ready, on our way to the iGEM European meetup.

This years, European iGEM Meetup was hosted by teams EVRY and IONIS in Paris. Some of our team members attended this event which consisted of a poster session on the Saturday morning where we presented our project and started to identify other teams who were working on similar projects or who might need access to equipment we had for collaboration. We got lots of good feedback on our project, and particularly our poster design, which lead to it being redesigned for the later Westminster Meetup. In the afternoon there were two round table dicussions with members of the synthetic biology community. Of particular interest to us was the talk on biosecurity which contained useful information on considerations for our human practices around biosecurity and introduced us to the concept of 'dual purpose' constructs which is something we discuss further in our safety work.

Westminster Meetup

On the 17-18th of August a half of Newcastle University iGEM 2016 team went to UK iGEM teams meet up in University of Westminster where we had to display our poster and make the presentation.

The presentation went well, but a few improvements could be made. First of all, the clear structure of the presentation that had separate sections for introduction, microfluidics and breadboard, genetics and human practices worked well. We will try to make our next presentation very structural as well. Also, a breadboard design picture should be included in order to help people visualize how our final product looks like. Our human practices part looked very integrative and different compared with other teams and now we should continue and actually develop a human practices simulator. Finally, chronological order in some parts of the presentation such as human practices were easy for listeners to understand and follow so we are planning to use this approach in other parts of our presentation.

The poster was received positively as well. However, when comparing ours with the ones of other teams we have indicated a few areas which could be improved. First of all, our poster could have contained less text and maybe bullet points to make it more attractive. By reducing the amount of text in the poster we are also able to make the heading and text larger. Finally, we would like to make the sections of our final poster more separate than before. Even though this poster had a better separation than the previous one, the components description were a little bit scattered and thus harder to follow.

IWDBA 2016

Whilst half of our Team was at the Westminster iGEM meetup the others half were in Newcastle attending IWBDA 2016, the international workshop on biodesign automation. There we heard from a number of researchers in fields related to synthetic biology and were able to explain our idea to them on order to get feedback. We found that the feedback was positive once people fully understood our idea but that we were not explaining our end product, the plug and play kit, very well. We resolved to make better use of props such as the existing electronics kits for children at future presentation opportunities. Whilst gathering feedback on our idea we were fortunate to find someone working on the same area, but from the opposite end - using electronics to sense signals from the bacteria. In particular, Luis Ortiz of Boston University was using pH probes to sense the bacteria and integrate this information into a computer system. He gave us useful information on altering the pH of a growth media using bacteria which is something we investigated further as an alternative way of changing the resistance of our growth media in our various 'resistor' constructs. We also heard from researchers working on new micofluidics fabrication techniques involving the etching of plastics rather than moulding PDMS. We investigated this further when considering our 'environmental responsibility' from both a human practices and safety perspective.

Picture of us and the 2016 Leiden iGEM Team
Us and the Leiden iGEM Team at the IWBDA 2016 dinner at Durham Castle.

Whilst at IWBDA we also had the pleasure of meeting the 2016 Leiden iGEM team and to hear about their idea and discuss the progress of both our projects.

Edinburgh Meetup

Everyone in attendance at the Edinburgh iGEM Meet Up.
Us, and the other iGEM teams who attened the Northen iGEM Meetup held in Edinburgh.

The Northern iGEM Meetup was held on the 29th of July at the University of Edinburgh. This was an opportunity for teams from Scotland and Northern England to get together and present on the work they had done so far. As we had not completed many experiments at this point we presented a similar presentation to that one we delivered to sixth form students at our schools taster day for syntehtic biology. We thought this would be a good opportunity to start on our human practices work and so covered information about our project and where we can see our research and ideas in the coming years. We also made sure to pose some important ethical issues that we had been encoutering in our project to the audience in order to guage their responses.

We also used the Northern Meetup to look for new collaboration opportunities. It was here we met the Edinburgh undergraduate iGEM team. Like us they were working on a project interfacing bacteria and eletronics, in this case on creating a modular system for storing data in DNA. Also like us, they had encountered problems explaining their work to other people and getting feedback from them. This was particulalry important to them as the end-product of their technology is a system useable by consumers.

We explained to them that we were creating a computer game based ‘thought experiment’ designed to stimulate discussion around the consequences of using our technology as part of our human practices and offered to integrate their storage system into our thought experiment so that they could use it to get feedback. They thought this was an excellent idea and we invited them down to Newcastle to meet with us and discuss how they wanted their system to be presented within our 'thougt experiment'.

Edinburgh

Us having a meal with Edinburgh when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration.
Us and the Edinburgh team having a meal when they came down to visit to discuss our collaboration.