IGEM:Harvard/2006/Cyanobacteria: Difference between revisions

From OpenWetWare
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
==Organization Suggestions==
==Organization Suggestions==


3000kb, 11cents/base. --> synthetic
3000bp, 11cents/base. --> synthetic


Think about these questions when preparing your project proposals for the group meeting.
Think about these questions when preparing your project proposals for the group meeting.

Revision as of 16:42, 17 June 2006

Organization Suggestions

3000bp, 11cents/base. --> synthetic

Think about these questions when preparing your project proposals for the group meeting.

For each project idea:

  • What is the specific goal of the project?
    • Biobrick the oscillator
      • Biobrick kaiA, kaiBC.
      • need to find out how kaiA/BC are regulated to do so
    • Test the oscillator in E. coli
    • Alternate phrasing, courtesy of Kit Parker - what is the "deliverable?" The thing you will point to and say "this is our project?"
      • Our deliverable is a (multiple?) BioBrick part(s)
  • What are two or three possible means of implementing the idea?
  • Risk
    • How many untested things have to work for the project to succeed?
    • How will you test whether those things work or not?
    • How will you adjust your plan when one of these things fails to work?
    • How will you minimize the time/effort/resources lost to a failed design?
      • Can your time/effort/resources apply to more than one design simultaneously?
  • Reward
    • How cool, fun, exciting is the project for you?
    • What if any is the usefulness or societal benefit of the project?
    • What is going to impress the judges in November?
  • Timeline
    • What are the project milestones? (design, construction, testing)
    • What is the estimated time required for each? (always overestimate)
    • If you can't reach your ultimate goal by August, is there a satisfying intermediate goal?
    • What is the immediate next step in pursuing the project?
      • If DNA synthesis will be required, how soon will you have the sequence designed?

  • Nakajima et. al: in vitro, the proteins oscillate abeit not with as large of an amplitude