Team:uOttawa/Project

From 2009.igem.org

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       uOttawa IGEM2009
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       uOttawa iGEM2009
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           <a href="http://www.uottawa.ca">uottawa</a></li>
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           <a href="http://www.medicine.uottawa.ca/">Faculty of medicine</a></li>
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           <a href="http://www.engineering.uottawa.ca/">Faculty of engineering</a></li>
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          <a href="http://www.uottawa.ca/research/">VP research</a></li>
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          <a href="http://www.epocal.com/">Epocal</a></li>
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          <a href="http://www.medicine.uottawa.ca/crem/eng/">CREM-CRME</a></li>
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          <a href="http://www.gehealthcare.com/caen/">GE healthcare</a></li>
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         <h3>Latest Events</h3>
         <h3>Latest Events</h3>

Revision as of 01:35, 19 October 2009

uOttawa iGEM2009

uOttawa IGEM2009

Overall project

With more and easier access to high-calorie foods the worldwide prevalence of obesity has been on the rise in the past quarter century. In Canada alone, the average rate of obesity has doubled from 1979 to 2004, and approximately 23% of Canadian adults are obese (As estimated by Statistics Canada). Obesity is typically associated with many adverse health conditions and puts an enormous strain on the public healthcare system. Our goal is to engineer a strain of Lacobacillus to express the enzymes required for the synthesis of cellulose from glucose in an attempt to reduce the caloric intake of obese individuals. Cellulose is a polymer of linked D-glucose units that cannot be digested by humans. Lactobacillus is a strain of bacteria, which is commonly used to make yogurt, cheese, beer and other fermented foods, and is in fact part of the natural human gut fl ora. The idea would be to have an obese individual ingest yogurt containing our engineered strain of bacteria as a probiotic. That way after they have consumed their meal, a portion of the glucose from the meal would be converted into cellulose in the intestines, effectively reducing their caloric intake.

Project Details

Results