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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Collin Marino</b>: As head of the Wetlab committee and member of the wiki and entrepreneurship committees, Collin was the member that originally came up with the project idea. As Wetlab lead, he spearheaded the initial planning of experimental procedures and oversaw the procedure development and flow chart design. In addition, Collin wrote and successfully filed the provisional patent, allowing the team to begin sharing our idea with experts and getting their feedback. Also, Collin did the coding for the wiki and created a template for the pages, which allowed other team members to help build the wiki as well.</li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Dev Patel</b>: As head of the Human Practices Committee and member of the Wetlab, wiki, and modeling, Dev worked on writing the code of ethical conduct and most of the wiki write-up for the Human Practices committee. In modeling, Dev worked with Pietro to develop the NetLogo model to show substrate movement in BMCs. In addition, in Wetlab, Dev helped research collect and write the procedures for the Enzyme subteam, inputting those into Benchling, along with any sequences.</li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Jacob Polzin</b>: As head of the Wiki committee and member of the Modeling and Wetlab committees, Jacob was the one that proposed our circuit contain operon elements with unique promoter/enhancer/RBS to curtail metabolic overload while maintaining the right product ratio. He also proposed we add GFP to one of the PDU proteins so that we could verify formation. In addition, as Wiki Lead, Jacob kept everyone motivated and focused on building quality content cooperatively. For modeling, he focused on helping determine the required concentration outputs along with the means of achieving that ratio with promoter and RBS sequence manipulation.</li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Pietro Revelli</b>: As Chief FInancial Officer, co-head of then Entrepreneurship Committee and member of the Wetlab and Modeling, Pietro worked on the market analysis of resveratrol, applied to countless grants and made the budget for the team. In addition, on the modeling team, Pietro worked on the Cobra Toolbox in Python and Matlab and was the one who pointed out the importance of the ACS and ACC in the resveratrol pathway. </li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Sophia Link</b>: As a member of the Wetlab and Wiki committees, Sophia worked on the design of the DNA scaffold and helped with the writeup and organization of Reverse transcriptase assembly Wetlab procedures. In addition, Sophia created most (if not all) of MANIFOLD’s graphics, including the one on our home page and the design of the flowcharts that can be seen on the experiments page. </li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Aparna Kola</b>: As co-head of the entrepreneurship committee and member of the Human Practices and Modeling Committee, Aparna worked on ____</li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Veronica Gutierrez</b>: As a member of the Wetlab, Wiki, and Entrepreneurship committees, Veronica helped research and write procedures regarding the construction of the BMC, aided in the overall structure and organization of the wiki and helped collect details on current or pending patents. In the lab, Veronica worked with Colin Haws to go through the different procedures pertaining to BMC formation and analyze the results. </li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Edward (Eddie) Micklovic</b>: As part of the Human Practices committee, Eddie spearheaded the Virginia iGEM podcast series “Mick and Mates”, filming and editing the videos and sound. In addition, Eddie helped work on the code of ethical conduct. </li> |
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− | <li><b>Dr. Keith Kozminski</b>: | + | <li><b>Dr. Keith Kozminski</b>: As our teams head advisor, Professor Kozminski aided in nearly every aspect of team and project development. In the spring, he was the teacher of the class the gave us the foundation of synthetic biology and where we first developed our project idea. Throughout the summer and the fall, Professor Kozminski was always available for advice or suggestions on device design, experimental protocol development, intellectual property advice, general iGEM questions, and much more. The entire team is incredibly grateful for all of his help and guidance. </li> |
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<li><b> Dr. Jason Papin </b>: Dr. Papin is our iGEM sponsor and the backbone of our modeling efforts. After the formulation of our device, our talks with Dr. Papin helped us to understand the questions we need to answer and therefore the models we need to create in order to answer such questions. Dr. Papin also shared with us his own research labs resources to help us understand our models and create better outputs for presentation.</li> | <li><b> Dr. Jason Papin </b>: Dr. Papin is our iGEM sponsor and the backbone of our modeling efforts. After the formulation of our device, our talks with Dr. Papin helped us to understand the questions we need to answer and therefore the models we need to create in order to answer such questions. Dr. Papin also shared with us his own research labs resources to help us understand our models and create better outputs for presentation.</li> | ||
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− | <li><b>Dr. Cheryl Kerfeld</b>:We begin by cold-emailing Dr. Cheryl Kerfeld, a renowned researcher out of UCLA and Michigan State with a long history of experimenting with BMCs. Dr. Kerfeld agreed to talk about her cutting-edge BMC research, even explaining her current work on customizable BMC shells, and also gave feedback on our initial project ideas. She immediately took to our concepts, and she afforded us the endorsement of a researcher who's worked with BMCs for decades. She gave us multiple contacts for other top BMC researchers, as well as a better understanding of her field of work, all of which better helped us move forward.</li> | + | <li><b>Ms. Kathryn Christopher</b>: From helping set up the laboratory to collecting and providing us with common reagents, Ms. Christopher was central to our team’s transition from virtual development to in-person experimentation. She sorted through available reagents and helped set up the lab for our team to be able to come into the lab and hit the ground running. Furthermore, she was available throughout the fall if we needed any extra glassware, tools, or reagents. The Virginia iGEM team is very thankful and appreciates Ms. Christopher’s work and availability throughout our time in the lab and the months leading up to it.</li> |
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+ | <div class="paragraph"> | ||
+ | <li><b>Dr. Cheryl Kerfeld</b>: We begin by cold-emailing Dr. Cheryl Kerfeld, a renowned researcher out of UCLA and Michigan State with a long history of experimenting with BMCs. Dr. Kerfeld agreed to talk about her cutting-edge BMC research, even explaining her current work on customizable BMC shells, and also gave feedback on our initial project ideas. She immediately took to our concepts, and she afforded us the endorsement of a researcher who's worked with BMCs for decades. She gave us multiple contacts for other top BMC researchers, as well as a better understanding of her field of work, all of which better helped us move forward.</li> | ||
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Ian Burbulis</b></li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Josaih Zoyner</b></li> |
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− | <li><b> | + | <li><b>Hank Greely</b></li> |
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Revision as of 00:28, 25 October 2020
Index:
Attributions
Team
Advisors
Wetlab Advising and Support
Human Practices Advising and Support
Modeling Advising and Support
Wiki Advising and Support
Entrepreneurship, Legal and/or Business Advising and Support
And a special thanks too...