Team:FHS Frederick MD
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====3A Assembly==== | ====3A Assembly==== | ||
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+ | We used the 3A, or 3 antibody, assembly kit in order to transform E.coli with two genes, the LOV gene and the NirB gene. These genes will allow for further work with Schwenella bacteria in the anaerobic microbial fuel cell. We then used the mini-prep components of the kit to purify our plasmid. We verified the plasmid's presence through electrophoresis and further sequence analysis. | ||
===Notebook=== | ===Notebook=== |
Revision as of 16:36, 16 June 2014
You can write a background of your team here. Give us a background of your team, the members, etc. Or tell us more about something of your choosing. | |
Tell us more about your project. Give us background. Use this as the abstract of your project. Be descriptive but concise (1-2 paragraphs) | |
Team FHS_Frederick_MD |
Official Team Profile |
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Contents |
Team
We are interested in creating a microbial fuel cell that utilizes anaerobic bacteria to produce electricity. In order to optimize the growth conditions in the fuel cell, a fluorescent protein marker will be added so to visualize bacterial growth. We plan to implement an oxygen-sensitive promoter to induce expression of the glowing gene. This should ensure that bacteria only grow under anaerobic conditions. This would lead to the creation of a genetic construct that can be deposited back into the “toolbox” parts repository for iGEM.
Goals
Microbial Fuel Cells
This is about microbial fuel cells. (Alan's section)
A microbial fuel cell is a device that converts the chemical reactions of bacteria into electricity. Within the fuel cell certain bacteria under anaerobic conditions will remove the electrons from organic matter and transfer them to an anode, which will then transfer the electrons through a circuit to a cathode. The current and voltage produced by this process is what creates the electricity required to power certain objects such as a light bulb.
The bacteria that we are currently creating is meant to optimize the microbial fuel cell's potential, as bacteria that will glow under anaerobic conditions will reveal any weaknesses in the fuel cell, structural or otherwise, which can then be assessed and dealt with.
Gene Design
(Kyle and Jonathon, briefly summarize how NirB and LOV work together.)
NirB Promoter
(Kyle, can you add a paragraph here on the NirB promoter?)
LOV Domain
(Jonathon, this is your area to describe how we engineered the LOV gene.)
Methods
(This is Dillon's domain.)
3A Assembly
We used the 3A, or 3 antibody, assembly kit in order to transform E.coli with two genes, the LOV gene and the NirB gene. These genes will allow for further work with Schwenella bacteria in the anaerobic microbial fuel cell. We then used the mini-prep components of the kit to purify our plasmid. We verified the plasmid's presence through electrophoresis and further sequence analysis.
Notebook
Show us how you spent your days.
Results/Conclusions
What did you achieve over the course of your semester?
Safety
What safety precautions did your team take? Did you take a safety training course? Were you supervised at all times in the lab?
Attributions
(ALL: Please write something about yourself and what you have been doing on the team.)
<forum_subtle />
Human Practices
What impact does/will your project have on the public?
Renewable Energy
(Kyle: How do fuel cell help produce clean renewable energy?)
Clean Water
(Alan: How do fuel cell produce a clean source of water?)
Basic Research
(Dillon: How will the oxygen-sensitive fluorescent gene we're making help people study and improve upon microbial fuel cell performance?)
Public Awareness
(Jonathon: Discuss how our meeting with Cardin helped raise public awareness for STEM.)
Fun!
What was your favorite team snack?? Have a picture of your team mascot?
<forum_subtle />
Sponsors
We'd like to thank the following organizations for making this possible.