Team:UNIPV-Pavia/Team

From 2008.igem.org

Revision as of 17:22, 20 October 2008 by Magni (Talk | contribs)


Home.jpg Home Unipv logo.jpg The Team And.jpg The Project Safety.jpg Biological Safety Dna.png Parts Submitted to the Registry
Laptop.jpg Dry Lab Pipette.jpg Wet Lab Math.gif Modeling Note.jpg Protocols Notebook.gif Activity Notebook


Who we are


Instructors:

  • Maria Gabriella Cusella: professor of Anatomy
  • Paolo Magni: professor of Bioinformatics


Advisor:

  • Daniela Galli: post-doc researcher working on Tissue Engineering


Undergrads:

  • Lorenzo Pasotti: Master student in Biomedical Engineering.
  • Mattia Quattrocelli: Master student in Molecular Biology


M.G.Cusella
P.Magni
D.Galli
Paso
Mattia


What we did

Paolo Magni and colleagues wanted to introduce Biomedical Engineering students into Synthetic Biology. So, he decided to get some information from Bologna University colleagues Silvio Cavalcanti and Francesca Ceroni, who already worked in this field. At the beginning of 2008 Paolo Magni visited Bologna University labs, located in Cesena, to understand what kind of wet lab resources were necessary to develop a Synthetic Biology project and the iGEM competition seemed to be the right opportunity to start a project. Because Engineering faculty in Pavia had not the required facilities, it was necessary to involve Maria Gabriella Cusella, who leads a Molecular Biology lab in a structure that already worked with Engineering faculty (Center for Tissue Engineering). Then they started selecting students to build up the iGEM team. They chose one Biomedical Engineering master student, Lorenzo Pasotti, one Molecular Biology master student, Mattia Quattrocelli, and a lab advisor, Daniela Galli. In the first weeks of April, Lorenzo trained Mattia about Digital Electronics principles and mathematical modeling. In the meanwhile, Mattia trained Lorenzo about wet lab work. The training included a presentation of all the lab instrumentation, basic Microbiology and Molecular Biology protocols and safety issues. These activities allowed the two students to learn the preliminary skills to start a multidisciplinary collaboration and then they started to get information from literature and from the Registry, to understand what kind of original device they could design. After some weeks they two chose a project and, after some meetings with the other team members, they begun project implementation when Spring 2008 DNA Distribution arrived. The two students worked together in lab to build up and test the designed devices. They also organized periodic meetings with the team instructors to discuss about project progress. Daniela Galli supervised students' wet lab activity and was always ready to help to solve specific biological problems. During our activities, we found very useful to keep in touch with Bologna iGEM Team to share doubts and issues about the work at the bench. In particular, several conference calls were organized and two meetings were scheduled in Pisa and Bressanone (Italy). It was fundamental to compare lab protocols and techniques to help each other avoiding mistakes and speeding up project progress. The main topics of our discussion were the optimization of plasmid resuspension and ligation reaction steps.


Where we're from

Pavialocation.jpg