Rice University 2006
From 2006.igem.org
Contents |
Welcome
Welcome to the Rice [http://icampus.mit.edu/projects/iGem.shtml International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM)] Team Wiki. We are participating in the iGEM Competition for the first time so we are currently building our team. Explore our website or contact us, as we will be constantly updating with the latest developments in the project.
Undergraduate Students
Alessandra Carreon - Senior, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering
Chris Conner - Junior, Biochemistry and Computational & Applied Mathematics
Dario Prieto - Junior, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering
Miinkay Yu - Junior, Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering
Tina Chen - Senior, Kinesiology
Thomas Segall-Shapiro - Incoming Freshman
Graduate Students
Bibhash Mukhopadhyay - Molecular & Cell Biology, Baylor College of Medicine
Christie Peebles - Bioengineering
Irene Martinez - Bioengineering
Jay Raol - Computational & Applied Mathematics
Peter Nguyen - Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Advisors
Beth Beason - Biochemistry & Cell Biology
George Bennett - Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Jonthan Silberg - Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Ka-Yiu San - Bioengineering
Ken Cox - Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering
Steve Cox - Computational & Applied Mathematics
Synthetic Biology Journal Club
19 June
13 June
- J. Raol and D. Prieto described the 2005 iGEM projects from Caltech and Cambridge.
5 June
- K.-Y. San presented Programmable cells: Interfacing natural and engineered gene networks (Kobayashi, H. et al., PNAS 101: 8414-8419, 2004).
- P. Nguyen presented Environmentally controlled invasion of cancer cells by engineered bacteria (Anderson, J. C. et al., J. Mol. Biol. 355: 619-627, 2006).
30 May
- J. Silberg presented Directed evolution of a genetic circuit (Yokobayashi, Y. et al., PNAS 99: 16587-16591, 2002) and Programmed population control by cell-cell communication and regulated killing (You, L. et al., Nature 428: 868-871, 2004).
- S. Cox presented Construction of a genetic toggle switch in Escherichia coli (Gardner, T. et al., Nature 403: 339-342, 2000).
Here's what we'd like to see on your wiki page(s):
- A list of all team members, their roles, and email addresses
- Overview of project(s), including schematics and figures
- Ongoing data/updates about project(s), including schematics, figures, test data, and biobrick parts used
- Some photos of your team, facilities, institution, etc.
- Optionally, anything that broadcasts your team's personality, spirit, sense of fun, or coolness...