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Pakistani students win bronze at iGEM World Championship in US

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THE EXPRESS TRIBUNE > PAKISTAN
Pakistani students win bronze at iGEM World Championship in US
By Izhar Ullah
Published: November 1, 2016
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Twelve Pakistani undergraduate students have won a bronze medal in the iGEM World Championship Jamboree in Boston, United States.

In a first, 12 Pakistani students set to compete in iGEM world championship

The team consisted of five girls and seven boys from across the country, including Karachi, Hyderabad, Lahore, Kalat, Swat, Waziristan, Mardan and Peshawar. The project that won the medal was sponsored by Directorate of Sience and technology Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and was supported by Cecos University.

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PHOTO: EXPRESS

iGEM or the international genetically engineered machines competition is a flagship student competition that started in MIT and has been happening for the last 15 years with 285 teams from across the globe.

Seven Pakistani universities among world’s top 800 universities

The students, making Pakistan’s first team, gathered in Peshawar this summer to use the cutting-edge discipline of synthetic biology to solve one of the most pressing environmental challenges the country is facing.

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PHOTO: EXPRESS

The 12 students had a molecular biology refresher and an intense synthetic biology crash course in their first month before they brainstormed what problem to solve using the ‘designer bug’ they would create. They chose to focus on air pollution and set out to create a bacteria-based biosensor that could detect Carbon Monoxide and Nitrous Oxide and give out yellow and blue colours so a traffic warden could use it to test vehicle emissions on the spot and save valuable time and resources. Emissions with both gases would then give a green colour.

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PHOTO: EXPRESS

Pakistani organisation wins Global Goals Award in New York

The iGEM Peshawar team worked on a bio-based sensor that will detect poisonous gases in the air. It is based on a bacterial cell with genetic circuits made of synthetic DNA that the students designed and fabricated to produce different colours in response to the presence of carbon monoxide, nitrous oxide or both.

Dr Faisal Khan, principal Investigator and iGEM Team Supervisor who is also the Director of the Institute of Integrative Bio-sciences at CECOS University, Peshawar prior to the event told The Express Tribune that they have been waiting for this moment to introduce synthetic biology in Pakistan. He added, “We cannot be playing with Windows95 in an age of Android and iOS and we desperately needed this upgrade in life sciences in the country.
 
Pakistan Zindabad!

And then that annoying and ignorant Pakistani said that Pakistanis cannot even make a hole in a pin.
@Chauvinist @Zibago @Zain Malik @PaklovesTurkiye @YousufSSG @HAKIKAT @long_ @django

@GreenFalcon

Sir the fact of the matter is that advanced manufacturing in the private/public sector has been systematically killed off or in many cases not even allowed to exist. Today only foreign companies like Honda, Toyota, Daewoo, Haier and the like are assembling and then selling within Pakistan . It is NOT for lack of talent but the lack of a stable business environment that allows local talent to emerge. We definitely need not just events like the one in OP (Masha Allah and well done btw) but we now need to patent and productize it within Pakistan. It would be heartbreaking if this new idea sees full blown production outside Pakistan
 
Bravo! Just proves there is no shortage of talent in Pakistan just a shortage of opportunities.
 
What will happen next is some Ivy league uni will snap these folks up or certainly attempt to.
 

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