Team:British Columbia
From 2009.igem.org
(Difference between revisions)
(→The Bacterial Traffic Light) |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
The goal of our project is to construct an ''Eschericia coli'' bacterial "traffic light", that responds to increasing concentration levels of a given input (in our case, arabinose) with green, yellow, and red fluorescent outputs. Our project is unique because it is an analog biosensor, capable of responding to a continuous variable signal, rather than a binary biosensor that only signals on/off. | The goal of our project is to construct an ''Eschericia coli'' bacterial "traffic light", that responds to increasing concentration levels of a given input (in our case, arabinose) with green, yellow, and red fluorescent outputs. Our project is unique because it is an analog biosensor, capable of responding to a continuous variable signal, rather than a binary biosensor that only signals on/off. | ||
- | [[Image:BritishColumbia-Trafficlight.png|center|400px]] | + | <!-- [[Image:BritishColumbia-Trafficlight.png|center|400px]] --> |
+ | |||
+ | [[Image:E_coli_Traffic_Light_General.png|center|950px|Schematic black-box representation of the E. coli Biosensor that detects various concentration inputs and color outputs. The idea is discrete analog outputs based on a user-specified threshold for each range of concentration.]] | ||
The Traffic Light is composed of three distinct subparts: | The Traffic Light is composed of three distinct subparts: |
Revision as of 19:18, 20 October 2009
[http://www.ubc.ca ]
[http://www.ubc.ca ]
Home Team Traffic Light Sensor Lock&Key Jammer [http://partsregistry.org/cgi/partsdb/pgroup.cgi?pgroup=iGEM2009&group=British_Columbia Parts] Safety Sponsors Notebook Bibliography
The Bacterial Traffic Light
The goal of our project is to construct an Eschericia coli bacterial "traffic light", that responds to increasing concentration levels of a given input (in our case, arabinose) with green, yellow, and red fluorescent outputs. Our project is unique because it is an analog biosensor, capable of responding to a continuous variable signal, rather than a binary biosensor that only signals on/off.
The Traffic Light is composed of three distinct subparts:
- The pBAD promoter family
- The lock and key riboregulation system
- The Jammer.