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I would appreciate suggestions for my year-long AP Biology project. Such a proje

ID: 32756 • Letter: I

Question

I would appreciate suggestions for my year-long AP Biology project. Such a project would consists of a standard experiment, to be done over the period of a year, so it would have >to be fairly substantial.

I'm interested in anything cell/DNA/molebio related with a mathematical connection. I >would prefer something other than mere statistical analysis, maybe something like >differential equations.

I have access to standard undergraduate lab equipment; assume that I'm able to procure all necessary materials and that I'm capable of performing the experiment. Thank you for the help.

As per the suggestion of shigeta below, I leafed through the links, and found gene circuits interesting. So, what exactly is a gene circuit, how are they modeled, and what are they used for?

Explanation / Answer

This is a bit hard - most possible answers you still aren't going to like, but I'll give you three suggestions.

It sounds like you want to take something with a mathematical model and try to modulate it with molecular biology.

It seems unlikely that I can really give you a specific project, but there are four sources I will recommend you look at.

I think I'd suggest the further limiting assumptions:

The First suggestion I have is Jeff Hasty at UCSD. He has focused a lot on oscillating gene circuits. He has simple systems that might be reproducible with a small lab, most recent work that combines a GFP oscillator with LUX is pretty cool. Both oscillators and LUX are independently good systems to work with. . I've been a science fair judge and I can tell you, just reproducing one of his systems would be an impressive lot of work

Another body of work to look at is Adam Arkin. He has looked at lots of circuitry component candidates. Articles such as "The hunt for the biological transistor" might get you thinking. This is a broader body of work, and so it might take a while to get an idea from it.

Third, if this is boring to you and you want to look more broadly, you can look through the iGEM competitions. These are projects with oscillators and bio synthesis systems which sometimes have mathematical models associated with them. The big advantage here is that you might be able to start or join an iGEM team and then some or all the plasmids will be made already - mol bio gets very expensive if someone doesn't gift you some materials.