Group:Biohacking
Biohacking / DIYBio at LHS
We are the biohacking group at the London Hackspace, mostly beginners to biology attracted the potential of DIYbio and synthetic biology, with a couple of professional biologists as well. Get involved! It's fascinating, the field and community is growing all the time, together with the ability of amateurs to do cool stuff. Over the past year we've been developing our equipment, optimising techniques and running some research projects.
Our current projects
We're currently working on genetic testing, identifying specific genes using PCR and electrophoresis. We've been working mainly on sex typing with amelogenin, and have just started working on plant species testing to refine our DNA extraction and PCR process.
Our big goal for the next year is to begin projects involving genetic modification. For this we'll need to become certified as a class 1 lab, we are currently collecting information on how to do this.
- Sex typing with amelogenin
- Plant species testing
- Genetic modification
- Blood typing
- Algal biodiesel (n hold)
- DNA forensics (on hold)
- Other genetic tests to try
People
Andy, Mike, Nicholas, Paddy, Paul, Simon, Taylor, Tom, Tonderai, Will
How to find us
- Come to a meeting: we meet at 7pm every Wednesday in the London Hackspace: Unit 24, Cremer Business Centre, 37 Cremer Street, London E2 8HD. Email Nicholas if you can't find the place.
- Post on the biohacking mailing list
Membership
We encourage you to become a member of the biohacking group. Biohacking is more expensive than the typical hackspace activity, and with your membership we can pay for chemicals, primers, and any random equipment we may need.
To become a member, set up a standing order to the London Hackspace with the reference "biohacking". You need to become a hackspace member before you can see the direct debit details. Look here for more information. If you want to become a Biohacking member without joining the space (you really should join the hackspace! It's great), get in contact with Nicholas.
The suggested donation is £2 a week.
Our equipment
- Thermal Cycler (PCR Machine); Perkin Elmer 480
- Gel electrophoresis box
- Two centrifuges - estimated speed 5000 rpm
- Wet stuff: our inventory of primers, buffers, stains...
Equipment we want to build / buy in the future
- Dremelfuge - microcentrifuge to be made on a 3D printer. We have one, but using it is a bit ... character building. Need to print a new one.
- Open Source, Hackable PCR machine - We'll probably buy one of these when they become available
- Light Bulb PCR " less than $50 to build this machine (including the $30 arduino)"
Standard chemicals and reagents we use
(See suppliers further down the page for where to get these)
DNA extraction:
- Chelex 100
- 70% isopropanol (rubbing alcohol) - widely and cheaply available
PCR:
- Taq ReadyMix. Click on bulletin for useful info about procedure for using it.
- Purified water (non-sterile).
Electrophoresis:
- 1KB DNA ladder. Current ladder is aliquoted with loading dye from a 50 ug sample of concentration 0.2 ug / ul
- Ethidium bromide stock solution - 2 ul ethidium bromide solution to 40 ml water.
Shopping list
As of June 27, 2012, we need:
- Ladder, ideally 50-2000 bp (or two ladders spanning different distances) (Our current ladder works but isn't great)
- Agarose (nearly run out)
- Taq master mix (to replace that probably ruined by the freezer being turned off)
- Positive control (Our current positive control is suspect)
Expenses
Kitty: -£27.19 (as of July 25) (Yes, negative)
Spent on:
- Pressure cooker: £28.95 (May 02)
- Cabinet: £65.94 (July 25)
Resources
Education
- Nature.com comic about Synthetic Biology - Nice introduction to playing with genetic engineering/cloning, though aimed at kids
- Bugs' Crash Course in Molecular Biology - Recorded at the hackspace
- Sara's Introduction the the Biohacking Community - Recorded at the hackspace
- Good introduction to gel electrophoresis - Explaining one of the core techniques for working with DNA
- Good introduction to the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) - Explaining one of the core techniques for working with DNA
- Nature.com article on Biohacking - Free access. Nice explanation of what's needed in a lab and how different groups are managing it.
Community
- Interesting DIYBio community blog - Interesting blog taking articles from a few different groups
- Bio Curious - A well-established bihacking group in California
- Brain-Computer interface at Paris hackspace
- Nature.com article about biohacking community - Not the same one as above. Interesting, but behind a paywall :(.
- you can access it here: http://www.synbioproject.org/process/assets/files/6452/_draft/nbt-2009-12d_-_biotech_nin_the_basement.pdf -- kanzure 70.114.205.110 19:40, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
PCR primer design
- http://www.cybertory.org/exercises/primerDesign/index.html
- http://www.premierbiosoft.com/tech_notes/PCR_Primer_Design.html
- http://www.premierbiosoft.com/primerdesign/index.htm
- http://molbiol-tools.ca/PCR.htm
- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/tools/primer-blast/index.cgi?LINK_LOC=BlastHome
- http://www.bioinformatics.nl/cgi-bin/primer3plus/primer3plus.cgi
- http://bibiserv.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/genefisher2/
Suppliers
Cf. Suppliers.
- Sigma-Aldrich - Good for custom primers
- Cole-Parmer
- Farnell
- NBSBio - Good for ladders and cheap agarose (only low concentration) [NB: Be sure to navigate to http://www.nbsbio.co.uk NOT http://nbsbio.co.uk, or their payment system doesn't work. Weird.]
- New England Biolabs Good for TAQ
- VWR] - Big supplier of chemicals, glassware and various lab stuff. Sounds very positive about selling to the hackspace. Bugs is in the process of setting up an account with them.
- Invitrogen Don't seem to want to sell to us
Pledges
Assorted biohacking pledges can be found here. Current Pledges:
- Gene detection experiment kit
Proposed code of conduct
See here: http://wiki.hackspace.org.uk/wiki/Biohacking/Code_of_Conduct