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| ==Project Description==
| | CRISPR Initiative at HacDC page has moved to: |
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| CRISPR-Cas9 is a groundbreaking new gene editing technique in microbiology. In brief, ten years ago it was found that bacteria possess a self-defense mechanism against viruses that includes a virus definition database and a gene removal mechanism. The bacteria chromosomal DNA contains the inactive DNA sequences of harmful viruses. The defense mechanism reads the chromosomal DNA and compares it to the known virus sequence. If a match is found, the sequence is excised. This mechanism can therefore be exploited to excise any gene by replacing the virus definition sequences in the CRISPR sequence with the target sequence. Once the DNA is cut, a new gene can be inserted with reasonable success. The cost of this technique is dramatically reduced from pre-existing gene editing techniques.
| | https://wiki.hacdc.org/index.php/DC_CRISPR_Initiative_at_HacDC |
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| Read more here:
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| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CRISPR | |
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| In the ODIN kit experiment, bacterial (E.Coli HME63 strain) are modified to add resistance to the antibiotic Streptomycin. The kit provides the vulnerable bacteria, the resistance gene and growth media with and without antibiotic. The original unmodified bacteria can only grow on the Agar media whereas bacteria with a successfully edited genome will also grow on the Streptomycin-laced Agar.
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| ==Activities and Goals==
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| HacDC Project CRISPR is our effort to learn about, perform and teach CRISPR genetic editing at HacDC. To begin the project, we’ve ordered a Do-It-Yourself CRISPR Kit, which includes (supposedly) all the tools and ingredients needed to perform a CRISPR procedure a few times. We’ll hold a few events at HacDC to go through the procedure and document our experience. Eventually we’ll create a guide that older high school kids can follow. This project also explores interest in microbiology and genetics at HacDC. We're just starting! Keep an eye out for CRISPR events in our MeetUp page, on the mailing list and our Blabber discussion forum.
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| ==Project Team Members==
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| Enrique C. - Project Manager and Point of Contact
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| Nancy W. - Project Development Lead
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| ==Worklog==
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| July 30, 2016
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| We received the CRISPR kit purchased with Project EXPANSION funds (thanks!).
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| August 2, 2016
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| Nancy and Enrique inventoried the ODIN kit and designated the small classroom fridge as the "NO FOOD" Project CRISPR fridge.
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| August 5, 2016
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| Nancy and Enrique prepared four petri dishes (two Agar, two Streptomycin-Agar). The Agar and antibiotic-laced Agar (Streptomycin) are gel-like substances similar to gelatin. They come as powders which must be mixed with water and heated to dissolve. The recipe is proportioned for seven Petri dishes but we scaled down to one of each, scaling the Agar powders and water by one-seventh. Even so we were able to coat two dishes with each growth medium. We didn't have distilled or deionized water and used bottled purified drinking water in a pinch. The mixture (Agar gel only, no bacteria!) was heated in the microwave 7 seconds at a time. It took 4-5 cycles until the powders was fully dissolved and the liquid transparent, then another 5 minutes until it was cold enough to handle and pour into the plastic petri dishes. The dishes cooled at room temperture for an hour to remove some condensation (the covered hot liquid creates condensation on the lid), then placed in the fridge. Two are Agar (no antibiotic) and two are Strepomycin/Kan Agar (antibiotic laced).
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| August 10, 2016
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| Ken, Bobby, Nancy and Enrique. We streaked some of the original E.coli HME63 bacteria onto two plain Agar plates. Plate 1 was left out tonight. Plate 2 was immediately refrigerated.
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