20.109(F12): Online cloning lab and defense

From Course Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search


20.109(F12): Laboratory Fundamentals of Biological Engineering

20.109(F12) homepage landscape.jpg

Home        People        Schedule Fall 2012        Assignments        Lab Basics        OWW Basics       
DNA Engineering        System Engineering        Biomaterials Engineering              

LateNiteLabs.png
We're excited to partner with LateNite Labs to offer a virtual environment to run the 20.109 DNA engineering experiment we are performing in Module 1. Why do the lab within a virtual environment when we're running through the lab in the physical space as well? Well, for one thing, it may help you to see the connections of the day to day work we do. When the experimental steps are days apart, as they have to be in the physical lab, it's awfully easy to lose track of why we're doing one step or another. Here you can run a few days of lab in just a few hours! Another reason we like this virtual environment is that it allows you to simulate many different runs of the work--and actually see the results you'd get in the physical lab! In other words, you can make "virtual" mistakes and see how they'd come out in the lab. Finally, this virtual environment will show you parts of the lab that we don't have time or capacity for everyone to do in the physical lab. Here you can pour the gel or make the solution you need, rather than have them done for you by the teaching faculty...and so in that sense this is a more "real" view to the work you'll do when you leave our 20.109 class!

So, if you're willing to pilot this effort with us, we're excited to hear what you like and what you don't.

Introduction to the Platform

Getting started

Sign in (upper right, blue button), then "Launch Your Labs" (center of screen, blue button)

  • Your laboratory work area is the green counter top called the workbench.
  • All of your lab supplies are available to you on the glass shelf above the workbench. It is actually three shelves in one, switchable by clicking on one of the three shelf-tabs that appear just below the shelf:
      • Containers (test tubes, beakers, etc.)
      • Materials (chemicals, plants, etc.)
      • Instruments (thermometers, balances, etc.)

To get what you need, just click on the relevant shelf-tab, then click on the item on the shelf, drag it down to the workbench, and drop it in the middle part of the benchtop.

  • A few notes about this virtual bench:
    • It's 2 dimensional so you're restricted in some of the actions you can perform.
    • There is an unlimited supply of everything, as many test tubes as you need, even multiple thermometers and pH meters, so don't worry about running out of equipment or materials, or about breaking anything.
    • Once you’ve taken an object off the shelf it can’t go back. Discard anything you no longer need in the Recycling Bin below the workbench.

The golden rule of this lab space

Everything revolves around containers! This means, simply, that materials go into containers, and instruments measure and manipulate what is inside of those containers.

Practice

If you want to get used to the virtual lab space, try this.

Details for online cloning lab assignment

The lab is divided into three subsections:

  • Preparing the DNA
  • Putting the DNA together
  • Identifying your clone
  1. You and your lab partner should decide who will run each subsection. We STRONGLY recommend that one person run the "preparing the DNA" lab and the other partner run the other two. This will be the most even distribution of work. We do not need to know who ran which section, however. You will turn in this assignment together and get the same grade.
  2. Once you enter the lab environment, we recommend you print the lab protocol (accessed via the "procedures" button), then switch to the "lab notes" tab. In some browsers the procedures obscures the lab bench.
  3. The instructions have particular steps where you are asked to take a screenshot of your bench or to take some notes in the online lab notebook. These are the minimal points to document your work. Feel free to keep other notes or take other photos for this experiment. All will be helpful as you discuss your work with the TA on the relevant day lab.
  4. We'd also be very interested in hearing about your experience in this environment so please annotate your protocol pages as you go and then also write approximately 300 words (longer is OK) about the frustrations, joys, and learning associated with this virtual environment. It will help the developers and the 20.109 faculty know what to try next with these. Thanks!!