Team:MCIT Indianapolis/abstract
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Abstract | Abstract | ||
The number of melanoma cases has been increasing in populations worldwide. Nearly every hour, one American dies from melanoma. The technology currently available for melanoma encourages an individual to get a biopsy in order to diagnose it and therefore, another less invasive tool for diagnosis would be very efficient. In places where health care is not as readily available, providing a skin detecting cream for melanoma would allow people to ‘self-check’ for cancerous skin spots. The test would be easy to read and would allow an individual to know that they need to visit their doctor immediately for further action. The purpose of this project is to eventually produce a biosensor system incorporated within a topical cream or salve that can be used to detect the early onset of melanoma. The cream that could be eventually created in the future would function as a diagnostic tool for the early detection of melanoma that would facilitate for earlier and faster treatment to take place. In order to do so, the a biosensor system will be developed within a Saccharomyces cerevisiae chassis, in which a plasmid containing genes that glow in the presence of precancerous cells will be inserted. The plasmid will consist of a receptor protein, FGFR-1 that will have the ability to detect the over expressed Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF2) cell surface proteins located on the surface of potentially malignant melanoma tumors. | The number of melanoma cases has been increasing in populations worldwide. Nearly every hour, one American dies from melanoma. The technology currently available for melanoma encourages an individual to get a biopsy in order to diagnose it and therefore, another less invasive tool for diagnosis would be very efficient. In places where health care is not as readily available, providing a skin detecting cream for melanoma would allow people to ‘self-check’ for cancerous skin spots. The test would be easy to read and would allow an individual to know that they need to visit their doctor immediately for further action. The purpose of this project is to eventually produce a biosensor system incorporated within a topical cream or salve that can be used to detect the early onset of melanoma. The cream that could be eventually created in the future would function as a diagnostic tool for the early detection of melanoma that would facilitate for earlier and faster treatment to take place. In order to do so, the a biosensor system will be developed within a Saccharomyces cerevisiae chassis, in which a plasmid containing genes that glow in the presence of precancerous cells will be inserted. The plasmid will consist of a receptor protein, FGFR-1 that will have the ability to detect the over expressed Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF2) cell surface proteins located on the surface of potentially malignant melanoma tumors. |
Revision as of 12:50, 10 June 2013