Team:MIT
From 2009.igem.org
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<img src="http://openwetware.org/images/e/e2/Icon_info.png" alt="INFORMATION" border="0"> | <img src="http://openwetware.org/images/e/e2/Icon_info.png" alt="INFORMATION" border="0"> | ||
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[[Image:MIT_logo.jpg|center|200px]] | [[Image:MIT_logo.jpg|center|200px]] | ||
<center>MIT Department of Chemical Engineering<br> | <center>MIT Department of Chemical Engineering<br> | ||
MIT Department of Biological Engineering</center> | MIT Department of Biological Engineering</center> | ||
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===Undergraduates=== | ===Undergraduates=== | ||
*Brian Ross, MIT '11 | *Brian Ross, MIT '11 | ||
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*Alexandra Doolittle, MIT '11 | *Alexandra Doolittle, MIT '11 | ||
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*Cory Li, MIT '12 | *Cory Li, MIT '12 | ||
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*Dominic McDonald, MIT '10 | *Dominic McDonald, MIT '10 | ||
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===Graduate=== | ===Graduate=== | ||
*Brian Belmont | *Brian Belmont | ||
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*Chia-Yung Wu | *Chia-Yung Wu | ||
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*Jeffrey Wagner | *Jeffrey Wagner | ||
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*Nathan Klapoetke | *Nathan Klapoetke | ||
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*David Nielsen | *David Nielsen | ||
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*Scott Carlson | *Scott Carlson | ||
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*Stephen Goldfless | *Stephen Goldfless | ||
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*Shawn Finney-Manchester | *Shawn Finney-Manchester | ||
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*T.L. To | *T.L. To | ||
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===Professors=== | ===Professors=== | ||
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*Prof. Kristala Prather | *Prof. Kristala Prather | ||
**Department of Chemical Engineering | **Department of Chemical Engineering | ||
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Revision as of 19:11, 18 October 2009
We are the 2009 MIT iGEM page.
An aesthetics makeover of this page is due sometime between now and the jamboree.
Project DescriptionProject OverviewTo maximize control over a biological system, it would beneficial to have quick, reversible control over each step in gene expression, from transcription to translation to post-translational processing. Much work has been done to create switchable promoters, toggled by pulses of light, to control rates of transcription for genes of interest. The MIT iGEM team aims to take this concept and apply it to post-translational control, more specifically protein targeting in yeast. Our goal is to make a system in which a pulse of light causes a protein of interest to localize to one part of the cell. When pulsed with another wavelength of light, the protein will diffuse. In this way, a user can easily control both localization and delocalization of a protein of interest.
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MembersMIT Department of Biological Engineering Undergraduates
Graduate
Professors
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