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            <p>We hypothesized that the porcupine microbiome must contain an enzyme that can break down cellulose, as bark is food. <span class="article-number">02</span></p>
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Revision as of 21:41, 9 October 2017

Dalhousie iGEM 2017
Start

Softwood waste from the lumber industry contains cellulose, which can be turned into glucose and used to make biofuel. 01

18 APR

We mined the porcupine’s microbiome to identify the enzyme that was able to break down wood. 03

We created a metagenomic library of the genes able to code this enzyme as well as novel enzymes. 04

18 APR

We put these genes into E.coli to see if they could then digest cellulose down. 05

We put the E.coli into a bioreactor with cellulose to see if it gets broken down. In the future this can be combined with yeast to transform in finally into biofuel! 06

18 APR
End