Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
margin-top: 1em; | margin-top: 1em; | ||
margin-bottom: 1em; | margin-bottom: 1em; | ||
− | margin-left: | + | margin-left: 8em; |
− | margin-right: | + | margin-right: 8em; |
} | } | ||
</style> | </style> | ||
Line 75: | Line 75: | ||
hr { | hr { | ||
border: 2px solid; | border: 2px solid; | ||
− | margin-right: | + | margin-right: 80px; |
− | margin-left: | + | margin-left:80px; |
} | } | ||
</style> | </style> | ||
Line 85: | Line 85: | ||
margin-top: 1em; | margin-top: 1em; | ||
margin-bottom: 1em; | margin-bottom: 1em; | ||
− | margin-left: | + | margin-left: 6em; |
− | margin-right: | + | margin-right: 6em; |
text-align: left; | text-align: left; | ||
font-size: 20px; | font-size: 20px; |
Revision as of 06:07, 17 September 2018
Description
Introduction
The Impacts of Excess Fluoride:
Solution
What is a Riboswitch?
Our Design
How CHOP works:
- Using the ΔcrcB E. coli strain, which can accumulate fluoride intracellularly
- The Riboswitch detects fluoride
- Fluoride activates the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase enzyme
- Which allows for the growth of bacteria on agar plates with the antibiotic chloramphenicol
References
- Using the ΔcrcB E. coli strain, which can accumulate fluoride intracellularly
- The Riboswitch detects fluoride
- Fluoride activates the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase enzyme
- Which allows for the growth of bacteria on agar plates with the antibiotic chloramphenicol