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background-image: url(https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/b/b2/T--Valencia_UPV--GifHomeDesignUPV2018.gif);"></div><p style=" | background-image: url(https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2018/b/b2/T--Valencia_UPV--GifHomeDesignUPV2018.gif);"></div><p style=" | ||
− | padding: 26px;"> | + | padding: 26px;">See how we have designed our part collection to facilitate assembly automation.</p></a> |
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Revision as of 15:42, 13 October 2018
Synbio Has Never Been Easier
Access to Synthetic Biology by the interested layperson is currently hampered by several barriers, including a required background knowledge and availability of expensive and often bulky technological equipment. Printeria, a fully-equipped bioengineering device able to automate the process of printing genetic circuits in bacteria but made as simple and easy to operate as a domestic desktop printer, breaks down these barriers. It uses a digital microfluidic system creating little droplets that can be mixed and moved across predefined electrode paths on a PCB surface. Printeria combines this novel system with Golden Gate Technology, low-cost sensors and electronics, and a user-friendly software application. This way, the user is capable of assembling domesticated DNA parts in a one-step reaction and can control all biotechnological steps, from the assembly of parts and transformation to cell culture, with high accuracy. Printeria opens the door to a world of applications affordable for the general public.