Difference between revisions of "Team:UIUC Illinois/Implementation"

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<html lang="en"><head><meta charset="utf-8"/><meta content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1" name="viewport"/><title>Proposed Implementation | UIUCiGEM</title><script src="https://2020.igem.org/common/MathJax-2.5-latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"></script><link href="https://2021.igem.org/Template:UIUC_Illinois/css/contentCSS?action=raw&amp;ctype=text/css" rel="stylesheet"/></head><body><nav class="navbar navbar-expand-xl fixed-top"><div class="container d-flex justify-content-between"><a class="navbar-brand d-lg-inline-block" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois"><span>iGEM </span>UIUC</a><button aria-controls="navbarNav" aria-expanded="false" aria-label="Toggle navigation" class="navbar-toggler" data-target="#navbarNav" data-toggle="collapse" type="button"><span class="navbar-toggler-icon"></span></button><div class="collapse navbar-collapse" id="navbarNav"><ul class="navbar-nav ml-auto"><li class="nav-item dropdown"><a aria-expanded="false" 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href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Engineering">Engineering</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Experiments">Experiments</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Model">Model</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Notebook">Notebook</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Partnership">Partnership</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Implementation">Proposed Implementation</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Results">Results</a></div></li><li class="nav-item dropdown"><a aria-expanded="false" aria-haspopup="true" class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#" id="navbarPartsDropdown" role="button">Parts</a><div aria-labelledby="navbarPartsDropdown" class="dropdown-menu"><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Part_Collection">Part Collection</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Parts">Parts</a></div></li><li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Safety">Safety</a></li><li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Human_Practices">Human Practices</a></li></ul></div><div class="d-flex" id="themeSwitchWrapper"><i class="far fa-sun"></i><div id="themeSwitch"><label class="switch" for="themeSwitchInput"><input id="themeSwitchInput" type="checkbox"/><span class="slider round"></span></label></div><i class="far fa-moon"></i></div></div></nav><header class="d-flex justify-content-center align-items-center"><div class="container"><h1>Proposed Implementation</h1><p class="lead pl-1">A sample page for the theme.</p><hr class="my-4"/></div></header><main><div class="container"><div class="row"><div class="sidebar col-lg-3"><div class="nav" id="contents"><h5>Contents</h5><ul></ul></div></div><div class="content col-lg-9"><article><h1>Headings</h1><h2>Level 2 Heading</h2><h3>Level 3 Heading</h3><h4>Level 4 Heading</h4><h1>Emphasis</h1><p>This is regular text.</p><p><strong>This is bold text.</strong> <strong>This is also bold text.</strong></p><p><em>This is italic text.</em> _This is also italix text.*</p><p><em><strong>This text is bold and italic both.</strong></em> <em><strong>This text is bold and italic both.</strong></em></p><p><s>Strikethrough</s></p><h1>Lists</h1><ol><li>This is item one.</li><li>This is item two.</li><li>It's okay to number every item as 1.<ul><li>This is a nested list.</li><li>Use asterisk for an unordered list,</li><li>Further nesting?</li></ul><ul><li>Plus sign also works.</li></ul><ul><li>And so does minus.</li></ul></li><li><s>Birds aren't real.</s></li></ol><h1>Links</h1><p><a href="https://google.com">Google</a></p><p><a href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Implementation/Link-goes-in-parenthesis">Text goes in square brackets</a></p><h1>Blockquote</h1><blockquote><p>This is a blockquote. This continues in the same paragraph.</p><p>To change the paragraph, you have to leave a line.</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>This is another blockquote.</p><p><strong>Pranav Ballaney, 2020</strong></p></blockquote><h1>Images</h1><p>This is a regular paragraph.</p><h4>This is a level 4 heading.</h4><p><a href="google.com">This is a link</a></p><div class="image"><img alt="Caption" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2021/f/f0/T--UIUC_Illinois--img--Description--josh-withers.jpg" style="width: 100%"/><p>Figure 1: Caption</p></div><p>Back to regular text.</p><h1>Tables</h1><p>This is a regular paragraph, which precedes the table. When you want to insert a table, indent one level back and specify the plugin. Then indent inside again and start writing the table.</p><table><caption id="table1captiongoeshere">Table 1: Caption goes here.</caption><thead><tr><th>This is</th><th>the table</th><th>header row</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>1</td><td>2</td><td>3</td></tr><tr><td>4</td><td>5</td><td>6</td></tr></tbody></table><p>And when you're done, go back to the regular markdown filter.</p><p><strong>Example 2:</strong></p><table><thead><tr><th style="text-align:left">Left aligned</th><th style="text-align:center">Center aligned</th><th style="text-align:right">Right aligned</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style="text-align:left">1</td><td style="text-align:center">2</td><td style="text-align:right">3</td></tr><tr><td style="text-align:left">4</td><td style="text-align:center">5</td><td style="text-align:right">6</td></tr></tbody></table><p><strong>Example 3:</strong></p><table><caption id="table3captiongoeshere">Table 3: Caption goes here.</caption><thead><tr><th></th><th colspan="2" style="text-align:center">Grouping</th></tr><tr><th>First Header</th><th style="text-align:center">Second Header</th><th style="text-align:right">Third Header</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Content</td><td colspan="2" style="text-align:center"><em>Long Cell</em></td></tr><tr><td>Content</td><td style="text-align:center"><strong>Cell</strong></td><td style="text-align:right">Cell</td></tr><tr><td>New section</td><td style="text-align:center">More</td><td style="text-align:right"><a href="https://google.com">Data</a></td></tr><tr><td>And more</td><td colspan="2" style="text-align:center">With an escaped '|'</td></tr></tbody></table><h1>Definitions</h1><p><dfn>Term ~ Definition</dfn></p><p>This can come <dfn>anywhere in ~ the text</dfn>.</p><h1>MathJax</h1><p>$$\int_{0}^{\infty} e^{-x^2} dx = \frac{\sqrt{\pi}}{2}$$</p><p>$$-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\nabla^2\psi + V\psi = E\psi$$</p><p>$$i\hbar\gamma^\mu\partial_\mu\psi = mc\psi$$</p><p>$$y_k = \frac{1}{\sqrt{N}}\sum_{n=0}^{N-1}x_n\omega_N^{kn}$$</p><h1>Citations</h1><p>In text citation for a research article with a DOI. <a href="#citation2">Rosano et al., 2019</a></p><p>In text citation for another research article with a DOI. <a href="#citation1">Allen &amp; Sheridan, 2015</a></p><p>In text citation for a book with no DOI. <a href="#citation3">Ingalls, 2013</a></p><p>In text citation for a website with institutional author. <a href="#citation4">TNAU Agritech Portal, n.d.</a></p><p>In text citation for a website with an author. <a href="#citation5">Author, n.d.</a></p></article><article id="references"><h1>References</h1><ol><li id="citation1"><p class="author">Allen, M. J., &amp; Sheridan, S. C. (2015).</p><cite>Mortality risks during extreme temperature events (ETEs) using a distributed lag non-linear model.</cite><p><span class="journalTitle">International Journal of Biometeorology</span> <span class="journalInfo">62(1), 57-67.</span></p><a class="in-text" href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s00484-015-1117-4" rel="noopener" target="_blank">CrossRef</a><a class="in-text" href="https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Mortality risks during extreme temperature events (ETEs) using a distributed lag non-linear model." rel="noopener" target="_blank">Google Scholar</a><a class="in-text" href="#intext1">Back to text</a></li><li id="citation2"><p class="author">Rosano, A., Bella, A., Gesualdo, F., Acampora, A., Pezzotti, P., Marchetti, S., ... &amp; Rizzo, C. (2019).</p><cite>Investigating the impact of influenza on excess mortality in all ages in Italy during recent seasons (2013/14-2016/17 seasons).</cite><p><span class="journalTitle">International Journal of Infectious Diseases</span> <span class="journalInfo">88, 127-134.</span></p><a class="in-text" href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijid.2019.08.003" rel="noopener" target="_blank">CrossRef</a><a class="in-text" href="https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Investigating the impact of influenza on excess mortality in all ages in Italy during recent seasons (2013/14-2016/17 seasons)." rel="noopener" target="_blank">Google Scholar</a><a class="in-text" href="#intext2">Back to text</a></li><li id="citation3"><p class="author">Ingalls, B. P. (2013).</p><cite>Mathematical modeling in systems biology: An introduction.</cite><p><span class="details">MIT Press.</span></p><a class="in-text" href="https://books.google.co.in/books?id=OYr6AQAAQBAJ" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Google Books</a><a class="in-text" href="#intext3">Back to text</a></li><li id="citation4"><p class="author"></p><cite>Agriculture: Crop production: Sugarcane. TNAU Agritech Portal.</cite><p><span class="details">(March 15, 2019). Retrieved on June 22, 2020. from </span><a class="in-text" href="https://google.com" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://google.com</a></p><a class="in-text" href="#intext4">Back to text</a></li><li id="citation5"><p class="author">Author Name. (n.d.).</p><cite>Agriculture: Crop production: Sugarcane. TNAU Agritech Portal.</cite><p><span class="details">Retrieved on June 22, 2020. from </span><a class="in-text" href="https://google.com" rel="noopener" target="_blank">https://google.com</a></p><a class="in-text" href="#intext5">Back to text</a></li></ol></article></div></div></div></main><footer><div class="container"><p>Sample template built using the iGEM Wiki Starter Pack by BITS Goa.</p><p>Code released under the MIT license.</p><p>Based on <a href="https://getbootstrap.com">Bootstrap</a> and themes <a href="https://bootswatch.com/flatly/">Flatly</a> and <a href="https://bootswatch.com/darkly/">Darkly</a> from <a href="https://bootswatch.com/">Bootswatch</a>.</p><p>Some content from the <a href="https://2020.igem.org/Team:Example">iGEM Example Wiki</a>. Images from <a href="https://unsplash.com">Unsplash</a>. 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<html lang="en"><head><meta charset="utf-8"/><meta content="width=device-width,initial-scale=1" name="viewport"/><title>Proposed Implementation | UIUCiGEM</title><script src="https://2020.igem.org/common/MathJax-2.5-latest/MathJax.js?config=TeX-AMS-MML_HTMLorMML"></script><link href="https://2021.igem.org/Template:UIUC_Illinois/css/contentCSS?action=raw&amp;ctype=text/css" rel="stylesheet"/></head><body><nav class="navbar navbar-expand-xl fixed-top"><div class="container d-flex justify-content-between"><a class="navbar-brand d-lg-inline-block" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois"><span>iGEM </span>UIUC</a><button aria-controls="navbarNav" aria-expanded="false" aria-label="Toggle navigation" class="navbar-toggler" data-target="#navbarNav" data-toggle="collapse" type="button"><span class="navbar-toggler-icon"></span></button><div class="collapse navbar-collapse" id="navbarNav"><ul class="navbar-nav ml-auto"><li class="nav-item dropdown"><a aria-expanded="false" aria-haspopup="true" class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#" id="navbarTeamDropdown" role="button">Team</a><div aria-labelledby="navbarTeamDropdown" class="dropdown-menu"><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Team">Team</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Attributions">Attributions</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Collaborations">Collaborations</a></div></li><li class="nav-item dropdown"><a aria-expanded="false" aria-haspopup="true" class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#" id="navbarProjectDropdown" role="button">Project</a><div aria-labelledby="navbarProjectDropdown" class="dropdown-menu"><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Contribution">Contribution</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Description">Description</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Engineering">Engineering</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Experiments">Experiments</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Model">Model</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Notebook">Notebook</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Partnership">Partnership</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Implementation">Proposed Implementation</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Results">Results</a></div></li><li class="nav-item dropdown"><a aria-expanded="false" aria-haspopup="true" class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#" id="navbarPartsDropdown" role="button">Parts</a><div aria-labelledby="navbarPartsDropdown" class="dropdown-menu"><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Part_Collection">Part Collection</a><a class="dropdown-item" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Parts">Parts</a></div></li><li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Safety">Safety</a></li><li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" href="https://2021.igem.org/Team:UIUC_Illinois/Human_Practices">Human Practices</a></li></ul></div><div class="d-flex" id="themeSwitchWrapper"><i class="far fa-sun"></i><div id="themeSwitch"><label class="switch" for="themeSwitchInput"><input id="themeSwitchInput" type="checkbox"/><span class="slider round"></span></label></div><i class="far fa-moon"></i></div></div></nav><header class="d-flex justify-content-center align-items-center"><div class="container"><h1>Proposed Implementation</h1><p class="lead pl-1">A sample page for the theme.</p><hr class="my-4"/></div></header><main><div class="container"><div class="row"><div class="sidebar col-lg-3"><div class="nav" id="contents"><h5>Contents</h5><ul></ul></div></div><div class="content col-lg-9"><article><p>A better method of plastic recycling is in high demand. Plastic waste will be a growing problem unless processes are implemented to form a circular economy in plastic waste management, where sustainable reuse and recycling is prioritized, and the production of pollutant byproducts is minimized. We determined that compared to other methods of recycling PET wastes, biocatalytic methods can be the ideal process to avoid production of secondary pollutants, as shown in Figure 1. Since bioremediation breaks down plastics into its precursor components using this method might help push for an increase in recycling rates. As James Hallinan, business development manager of synthetic biology at Cambridge Consultants describes, “Creating precursors for making plastic, rather than recycling whole plastic into a lower-grade material, might incentivize more recycling because there’s a better market for the final product. ‘There might be more economic appetite, more industrial appetite, for those types of materials’” [1].</p><p>We anticipate the end users of our project to be researchers or industry employees looking to design and test new optimal sequences, or people working within the PET degradation world looking for new solutions. In developing this pipeline, we can provide a framework for other researchers to work with. This is where our custom Python package comes in. Our package has been optimized for use with not only PETase, but with other proteins and enzymes, being fully customizable and ready to test for other projects. We anticipate possible end users of the package to be future iGEM teams, computational biologists, and bioinformaticians.</p><p>Our current experiments are in a microscale setting as we tested on PET films rather than larger volumes of PET products. The feasibility of implementation of bioremediation for PET recycling is dependent on cost and time-effective production of large scale enzymatic production. In the future, we will need to test these enzymes’ catalytic efficiency with larger volumes of PET and design greater throughput production processes of candidate enzymes as well.</p><p>Other aspects we need to consider in proposed implementation include the challenges that waste management services face in sorting and transporting waste. If a biocatalyst is used in practice, it must be in accordance with the current workflow and regulatory standards in place. For example, even if we are able to optimize efficiency of PET degradation, there is still a need to optimize the processes of sorting and transporting waste and recyclables. We learned this especially from our Human Practices work with Facilities &amp; Services, which helped us to realize that in depth communication with stakeholders involved is key to better understanding the needs of community and industry members. If we were to continue this project next year, we would like to expand upon this work to develop a hardware technology for optimized waste sorting. This hardware could be implemented into current practices to help address the F&amp;S’s need of better sorting plastics, a solution which would have even more of an impact within our community. This technology can be paired with our current pipeline for better plastic waste management from start to end of the line.</p><p>Sources:</p><ol><li>Peters, Adele. “Could These Plastic-Eating Enzymes Be the Miracle Solution to Our Plastic Problem?” Fast Company, 3 Oct. 2019, https://www.fastcompany.com/90412215/could-this-plastic-eating-enzyme-be-the-miracle-solution-to-our-plastic-problem.</li></ol></article></div></div></div></main><footer><div class="container"><p>Sample template built using the iGEM Wiki Starter Pack by BITS Goa.</p><p>Code released under the MIT license.</p><p>Based on <a href="https://getbootstrap.com">Bootstrap</a> and themes <a href="https://bootswatch.com/flatly/">Flatly</a> and <a href="https://bootswatch.com/darkly/">Darkly</a> from <a href="https://bootswatch.com/">Bootswatch</a>.</p><p>Some content from the <a href="https://2020.igem.org/Team:Example">iGEM Example Wiki</a>. Images from <a href="https://unsplash.com">Unsplash</a>. Web fonts from <a href="https://fonts.google.com">Google</a>.</p></div></footer><script src="https://2021.igem.org/Template:UIUC_Illinois/content-bundleJS?action=raw&amp;ctype=text/javascript"></script></body></html>

Revision as of 01:44, 19 October 2021

Proposed Implementation | UIUCiGEM

Proposed Implementation

A sample page for the theme.


A better method of plastic recycling is in high demand. Plastic waste will be a growing problem unless processes are implemented to form a circular economy in plastic waste management, where sustainable reuse and recycling is prioritized, and the production of pollutant byproducts is minimized. We determined that compared to other methods of recycling PET wastes, biocatalytic methods can be the ideal process to avoid production of secondary pollutants, as shown in Figure 1. Since bioremediation breaks down plastics into its precursor components using this method might help push for an increase in recycling rates. As James Hallinan, business development manager of synthetic biology at Cambridge Consultants describes, “Creating precursors for making plastic, rather than recycling whole plastic into a lower-grade material, might incentivize more recycling because there’s a better market for the final product. ‘There might be more economic appetite, more industrial appetite, for those types of materials’” [1].

We anticipate the end users of our project to be researchers or industry employees looking to design and test new optimal sequences, or people working within the PET degradation world looking for new solutions. In developing this pipeline, we can provide a framework for other researchers to work with. This is where our custom Python package comes in. Our package has been optimized for use with not only PETase, but with other proteins and enzymes, being fully customizable and ready to test for other projects. We anticipate possible end users of the package to be future iGEM teams, computational biologists, and bioinformaticians.

Our current experiments are in a microscale setting as we tested on PET films rather than larger volumes of PET products. The feasibility of implementation of bioremediation for PET recycling is dependent on cost and time-effective production of large scale enzymatic production. In the future, we will need to test these enzymes’ catalytic efficiency with larger volumes of PET and design greater throughput production processes of candidate enzymes as well.

Other aspects we need to consider in proposed implementation include the challenges that waste management services face in sorting and transporting waste. If a biocatalyst is used in practice, it must be in accordance with the current workflow and regulatory standards in place. For example, even if we are able to optimize efficiency of PET degradation, there is still a need to optimize the processes of sorting and transporting waste and recyclables. We learned this especially from our Human Practices work with Facilities & Services, which helped us to realize that in depth communication with stakeholders involved is key to better understanding the needs of community and industry members. If we were to continue this project next year, we would like to expand upon this work to develop a hardware technology for optimized waste sorting. This hardware could be implemented into current practices to help address the F&S’s need of better sorting plastics, a solution which would have even more of an impact within our community. This technology can be paired with our current pipeline for better plastic waste management from start to end of the line.

Sources:

  1. Peters, Adele. “Could These Plastic-Eating Enzymes Be the Miracle Solution to Our Plastic Problem?” Fast Company, 3 Oct. 2019, https://www.fastcompany.com/90412215/could-this-plastic-eating-enzyme-be-the-miracle-solution-to-our-plastic-problem.