Team:Imperial College
From 2008.igem.org
m |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:FALSE}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:FALSE}} | ||
[[Image:Imperial_2008_Logo.png|center|400px]] | [[Image:Imperial_2008_Logo.png|center|400px]] | ||
- | For the 2008 iGEM competition, the Imperial College team is working on the foundations for a bioprinter. We are using the Gram-positive ''Bacillus subtilis'' as a chassis (for a variety of reasons) and hope to be able to exert fine control over its movement via a recently-discovered clutch mechanism. Using light as a stimulus to localise the bacteria, we then intend to trigger production and secretion of a biomaterial in a set pattern. The project was inspired by 3D printers used in fabrication of prototypes for manufacturing, and our "blue-sky" aim is to make a 3D bioprinter!<br clear="all"> | + | For the 2008 iGEM competition, the Imperial College team is working on the foundations for a bioprinter. We are using the Gram-positive ''Bacillus subtilis'' bacterium as a chassis (for a variety of reasons) and hope to be able to exert fine control over its movement via a recently-discovered clutch mechanism. Using light as a stimulus to localise the bacteria, we then intend to trigger production and secretion of a biomaterial in a set pattern. The project was inspired by 3D printers used in fabrication of prototypes for manufacturing, and our "blue-sky" aim is to make a 3D bioprinter!<br clear="all"> |
Revision as of 14:48, 23 July 2008
For the 2008 iGEM competition, the Imperial College team is working on the foundations for a bioprinter. We are using the Gram-positive Bacillus subtilis bacterium as a chassis (for a variety of reasons) and hope to be able to exert fine control over its movement via a recently-discovered clutch mechanism. Using light as a stimulus to localise the bacteria, we then intend to trigger production and secretion of a biomaterial in a set pattern. The project was inspired by 3D printers used in fabrication of prototypes for manufacturing, and our "blue-sky" aim is to make a 3D bioprinter!
The Imperial College 2008 iGEM team is made up of 9 students (5 undergraduate bioengineers, 3 graduate biochemists and 1 graduate biologist), 4 advisors and two professors. You can find out more about the team members at the team page.
Imperial College
Home | The Team | The Project | Parts Submitted to the Registry | Modeling | Notebook |
---|
(Or you can choose different headings. But you must have a team page, a project page, and a notebook page.)