Team:DTU-Denmark/Notebook

Notebook

This page provides an overview of the the different stages of the project as well as what we did and when.

Choose a week

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    Week 7 (Feb 11 - Feb 17)

  • Team Overview

    Startup meeting - The team met for the first time and we were split into subgroups.

    Week 8 (Feb 18 - Feb 24)

  • Team Overview

    After a few brainstorming sessions, the team agreed to create a promoter library for eukaryotic cells as this year’s project.

    Week 10 (Mar 4 - Mar 10)

  • Team Overview

    The team started the preparations for the annual BioBrick Tutorial and we attend the annual DTU Open House where high school students can come and hear about the different studies and opportunities at DTU.

    At the DTU Open House

    Week 13 (Mar 25 - Mar 31)

  • Team Overview

    The team made dinner together and had some fun outside of the standard settings.

    The team is seated around a table with food, champaign and ice cream.

    Week 14 (Apr 1 - Apr 7)

  • Team Overview

    The team attended a talk about bioethics in genetically modified insects to be better prepared for working with GMO and sharing our work with the general public.

    Mickey Gjerris is standing in front of the DTU logo and a giant, colorful cricket

    Week 15 (Apr 8 - Apr 14)

  • Team Overview

    The annual BioBrick Tutorial took place with 69 guests from Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Finland. The meetup offered both an introduction to lab work and to iGEM in general.

    All of the participants at the BioBrick Tutorial posing on a grass field in front of the fountain at D.T.U.

    Week 17 (Apr 22 - Apr 28)

  • Team Overview

    The things needed for the science expo were prepared.
    The team attempted an escape room with a laboratory theme. They excelled in solving the different puzzles and finished with 29 minutes and 16 seconds to spare - one of the fastest teams ever!

    The team are posing, holding a blackbord stating that they completet the escape room mystery with 29 minutes and 16 seconds to spare.

    Week 18 (Apr 29 - May 5)

  • Team Overview

    The team attended the annual Science EXPO competition for primary school and high school students to spread the word about iGEM and talk about our project.
    Students were given the opportunity to come and try pipetting droplets of water with food colouring onto paper.

    Two petri dishes with green and blue water, ready to be pipeted.

    Week 19 (May 6 - May 12)

  • Team Overview

    Ken Bruno and Grayson Wawrzyn from Zymergen kindly agreed to an interview about using filamentous fungi in production.


  • Drylab

    First meeting of the drylab group with advisor Chris. The group discussed gene expression and the true meaning of “constitutive” (regulation is always present in some way). Moreover, the first goals were decided: looking for relevant datasets and finding literature.

    Week 20 (May 13 - May 19)

  • Team Overview

    The team attended the Nordic iGEM conference (NiC) hosted by the UCopenhagen team. Here, we presented the project and a poster to the other Nordic teams.

    The team is posing in front of their poster from the NiC

    Week 21 (May 20 - May 26)


  • Wetlab

    The first days in the lab were spent creating competent cells and the plasmids needed for the experiments.


  • Drylab

    The search for relevant literature continues. The group members started searching for information on the inducibility and leakiness of the promoters. First datasets to start our tests were found.

    Week 22 (May 27 - Jun 2)

  • Team Overview

    To celebrate that exams were over and that they could finally begin work on the project, the team had fun a barbeque evening.

    The team is seated outside, eating salad, sausages, and garlic bread.

  • Drylab

    The team analyzed RNA-Seq datasets to get a handle on the format and get used to the data structure.

    Week 23 (Jun 3 - Jun 9)

  • Wetlab

    Media for making protoplasts was prepared.



  • Drylab

    The group discussed the interpretation of the found data and how to handle data noise in datasets. Our supervisor Chris suggested many bioinformatics tools that would be useful in the journey forward. The group members started learning how to make these tools work.

    Week 24 (Jun 10 - Jun 16)

  • Team Overview

    The team went to The Hague to attend the iGEM meetup for teams and supervisors hosted by Netherlands National Institute for Public Health and the Environment. Here, they participated in workshops regarding i.a. safety by design and learned about storytelling and human practices. They also made a lot of contacts and collaboration agreements with other teams.

    The team is standing on the stairs in front of the RIVM in The Hague

  • Drylab

    At this point, the group made a more specific plan of action. Looking at how to identify the best candidate genes based on the expression level in RNA-Seq data. Several Aspergillus genomes were obtained and we tried to generate the first promoter. The results were analyzed. Stuff makes sense!!!

    Week 25 (Jun 17 - Jun 23)

  • Team Overview

    The team visited the Novozymes site in Lyngby, got a tour of the site, and learned a lot about what the industry is looking for in a promoter library!

    The team are situated around two tables with two different kinds of week-old bread and are to tell the difference

  • Wetlab

    The first attempt at making protoplasts of A. niger. This sadly failed. We talked to some professors who gave us advice on what to improve on the protocol. Furthermore, the first four fragments that will make up the initial integration plasmid were PCR amplified.

  • Drylab

    Start of coding part to make a general script so we don’t have to do the different parts manually

    Week 26 (Jun 24 - Jun 30)

  • Wetlab

    The PCR fragments were assembled into the first whole plasmid of our project! Following this, work began on inserting a GFP marker into the basic plasmid.


  • Drylab

    At this point, the group made a more specific plan of action. The first goal was to identify the best candidate genes based on the expression level.

    Week 27 (Jul 1 - Jul 7)

  • Team Overview

    We talked to Peter Richard from the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. He gave us excellent feedback on our project - we will definitely take this into consideration!



  • Wetlab

    The second attempt of making protoplasts of A. niger, this time with an improved protocol. This time, the attempt succeeded and we successfully made protoplasts and transformants, even following two different protocols for transformation!
    Furthermore, in preparation for a Gibson assembly, we amplified several fragments by PCR and on Friday they were assembled into one.

    Four agar plates can be seen. On the left are two negative controls with no growth and on the right are two positive controls with growth on them.

  • Drylab

    Gene candidates were picked to run in our program.

    Week 28 (Jul 8 - Jul 14)

  • Wetlab

    This week, we confirmed that the plasmids had been assembled correctly and we linearised them to be able to transform them into our fungi.



  • Drylab

    Synthetic promoters were ordered.

    Week 29 (Jul 15 - Jul 21)

  • Wetlab

    Fragments were prepared to be assembled into plasmids.

    Week 30 (Jul 22 - Jul 28)

  • Team Overview

    This weekend, the team participated in the Danish iGEM meetup hosted by the SDU team on the south of Funen. We had so much fun and got to discuss how to make our wikis, how to be better at presenting, and we discussed starting a national Danish iGEM community. Thank you so much to SDU iGEM for hosting this great event!

    The BioBuilders team posing with the UCopenhagen and the SDU teams

  • Wetlab

    We made another transformation of A. niger and got GFP producing transformants!
    We additionally Gibson assembled fragments from last week.

    Week 31 (Jul 29 - Aug 4)

  • Wetlab

    We Gibson assembled the plasmid pGIA2P2e which is the foundation for our testing calibration vector. The plasmid was sent to sequencing and PCR verified. From this, we saw that we had successfully assembled the plasmid. Concurrently, assembly of the plasmid pGIA2P2o began but this turned out to be problematic.

    We additionally began to prepare the fragments required for Golden Gate assembly of the next layer of plasmids.

    Week 32 (Aug 5 - Aug 11)

  • Wetlab

    The pGIA2P2e plasmid was linearized and prepared for fungal transformation.

    The team also received a kanamycin backbone from the SDU-Denmark team. This means that we can now continue the assembly process for the pGIA2P2o plasmid. However, the assembled plasmid turned out not to work so we retraced our steps and tried again. While this was going on, we Golden Gate assembled the plasmid pBB006 which we will use in the future for fungal transformation



  • Drylab

    The promoters were ordered! - This calls for celebration!

    Week 33 (Aug 12 - Aug 18)

  • Team Overview

    The team visited Novozymes for the second time to follow up on some questions.

  • Marcus, Helena, Jacob, and Louise pose in front of the Novozymes Lyngby building

    Wetlab

    The team realized that the second attempt at Gibson assembling the pGIA2P2o plasmid had failed and tried a third time - which also failed :'(. On a more positive note, pBB006 was linearised. A fungal promoter was inserted and the plasmid was the linearised successfully!

    Our synthetic promoters arrived and we were all very happy!

    Week 34 (Aug 19 - Aug 25)

  • Team Overview

    The team had dinner together to take a small break from all of the lab work and celebrate how far we'd come.

  • The team is sitting and eating Tex Mex food

    Wetlab

    The promoters arrived so the team worked like Trojans to get ready to run the biolector next week. During this, we inserted the promoters into our plasmid backbones using Golden Gate, inoculated liquid cultures, and miniprepped the 40 promoters in triplicate, totaling 120 plasmid samples!

    Week 35 (Aug 26 - Sep 1)

  • Wetlab

    Despite setbacks by the fungi's lack of will to grow, the team was able to run the first batch in the biolector and got some nice results!

    Week 36 (Sep 2 - Sep 8)

  • Team Overview

    The semester started again so the team was busy following their classes. But there was still time to go to the lab.




  • Wetlab

    The team tried out their new Opentrons robot and got it to prepare a PCR. The official name of that robot is now Robert.

    Week 39 (Sep 23 - Sep 29)

  • Team Overview

    On Tuesday, the team visited Bagsværd Kostskole og Gymnasium to talk about synthetic biology and our iGEM project.
    On Sunday, the team gathered and worked on the wiki. We got a lot of stuff done, including, but not limited to; checking the safety page, documenting our results until now, and describing our collaborations with other teams.

    Helena and Louise presenting our project at Bagsværd Boarding School and High School

    The team sits by a long table and work on the wiki writing

    Week 40 (Sep 30 - Oct 6)

  • Wetlab

    The team inoculated shake flasks with 5 different promoters and sampled the flasks every 3 hours.

    Ready to start shake flask experiment



  • Drylab

    The drylab team started to clean up the software so other people could use it and began the analysis of data from the biolector.

    Week 41 (Oct 7 - Oct 13)

  • Team Overview

    On Friday, the team visited Birkerød High School to talk about the project and synthetic biology. We had a blast and the students were incredibly interested in our presentation!

    Marcus is standing in front of a PowerPoing talking about D.N.A. and restriction enzymes.

  • Wetlab

    While still running the shake flasks and biolector, the team started the bioreactors in order to test the scalability of their synthetic promoters. Additionally, we examined the fungi with our promoters under a confocal microscope, seeing that both the spores and the hyphae were red, proving that our promoters had worked as intended!

    Science Expo

    Fungal spores with RFP

  • Drylab

    A guide for the software and for how to find data for the software was developed. This was was sent to the Brown-Stanford-Princeton team for them to test and evaluate the software.



    Week 42 (Oct 14 - Oct 20)

  • Team Overview

    The team spent the entire week writing the wiki and making it perfect :D




  • Wetlab

    The samples taken from the shake flasks and the bioreactor were analyzed in multiple ways. The biomass was separated and its proteins purified so we could determine the amount of RFP produced by the different promoters. Additionally, the samples were also tested for the amount of remaining glucose to indicate how far they were in their growth phases at the different sampling times.


  • Drylab

    Final data analysis, everything is stressful but we are almost there.



    Week 43 (Oct 21 - Oct 27)

  • Team Overview

    We're almost there and we've worked so very hard on our wiki. Wiki freeze is here and Boston is on the horizon!

The logos of our three biggest supporters, DTU Blue Dot, Novo Nordisk fonden and Otto Mønsted fonden The logos of all of our sponsors, DTU, BioNordica, Eurofins Genomics, Qiagen, NEB New England biolabs, IDT Integrated DNA technologies and Twist bioscience