Difference between revisions of "Team:Uppsala/InterLab"

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   <p>Synthetic biology is an emerging and constantly developing field which holds great promise to solve major problems humanity is facing today in terms of biology related medicine. In order to make use of this potential it is very important to reduce measurement variability and ensure there are standards in the field. To contribute towards this, our team has taken part in the iGEM interlab study, which has the noble goal of identifying and correcting the sources of systematic variability in synthetic biology measurement.<br><br>  
 
   <p>Synthetic biology is an emerging and constantly developing field which holds great promise to solve major problems humanity is facing today in terms of biology related medicine. In order to make use of this potential it is very important to reduce measurement variability and ensure there are standards in the field. To contribute towards this, our team has taken part in the iGEM interlab study, which has the noble goal of identifying and correcting the sources of systematic variability in synthetic biology measurement.<br><br>  
  
iGEM has in previous interlab studies showed that it is possible to reduce the variability in measurements between labs by measuring GFP expression in absolute fluorescence units which are calibrated against a known concentration of a chromoprotein. However, there is still a large source of variability in such measurements depending on the number of cells in the sample. By dividing the total fluorescence by the number of cells we can determine the mean expression level of GFP per cell. Usually, computing the optical density (OD) of the sample gets you an approximation of the number of cells present. OD measurements are however subject to high variability between labs due to spectrophotometer calibrations and is therefore not a precise approximation method. By instead using the direct method of cell count in each sample, one can remove this source of variability in measurements.  
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iGEM has in previous interlab studies showed that it is possible to reduce the variability in measurements between labs by measuring GFP expression in absolute fluorescence units which are calibrated against a known concentration of a fluorescent protein. However, there is still a large source of variability in such measurements depending on the number of cells in the sample. By dividing the total fluorescence by the number of cells we can determine the mean expression level of GFP per cell. Usually, computing the optical density (OD) of the sample gets you an approximation of the number of cells present. OD measurements are however subject to high variability between labs due to spectrophotometer calibrations and is therefore not a precise approximation method. By instead using the direct method of cell count in each sample, one can remove this source of variability in measurements.  
 
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Revision as of 16:57, 17 October 2018