Nov 03, 2014
TUD-Team successful at the International BIOMOD Contest in Harvard
For the third time in a row, a students team of TU Dresden
reached the second place at an international science contest in
Harvard (USA): Under the supervision of cfaed research group
leader Dr. Thorsten-Lars Schmidt, twelve students of the BIOTEC
master's programs 'Molecular Bioengineering' and
'Nanobiophysics' took part in the annual ‘Harvard Biomolecular
Design Competition’ (BIOMOD) in Boston. The interdisciplinary
team ‘Dresden DNAmics’ uses the DNA-Origami-technique to create
a nanometer-sized photonic circuit with the helices of the
genetic code carrier and gold nanoparticles.
In the previous two years, the TUD teams ‘Dresden Nanormous’
(2013) and the ‘Dresden Nanosaurs’ (2012) also reached a second
place each. The ‘Dresden DNAmics’ received the third prize in
the category ‘Best video’, the first prize for the best website
and therefore came on the second place over all. The winner was
a team from Australia.
“The target of our project is the production of plasmonic
waveguides,” the biochemist Leon Bichmann of the ‘Dresden
DNAmic’ Team explains. “The laser light propagates from gold
particle to gold particle along the path provided by the DNA
origami. We want to construct photonic nanocircuits which can
guide signals much faster than electric signals in a wire. The
DNA will be used in a completely new context, not as a carrier
for genetic information but as a building material.”
Applications might include smart phones and computers as well
as medical technologies.
The BIOMOD jury will judge not only the project itself, but
also the project’s website, a live presentation and a video
clip. Furthermore, the students had to find sponsors of
industry and science for their project. “Also at the ‘Long
Night of Science’ and at the senior academy in Dresden, we
presented the concept of our DNA circuits”, team member Jana
Sievers remembers. “Since January 2014, we worked on the
project – a good exercise also for the master thesis”, the
biotechnologist says.
The participation in this competition was initiated by TUD's 'B
CUBE – Center for Molecular Bioengineering' and 'Biotechnology
Center (BIOTEC)'. The international competition, in which 30
teams of the whole world participate, is organized by the Wyss
Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard
University. From 2010 to 2013, Dr. Thorsten-Lars Schmidt had
spent his Post-Doc-period there, before he moved to Dresden as
a research group leader of the Center for Advancing Electronics
Dresden (cfaed), the Cluster of Excellence for Electronics of
Technische Universität Dresden (TUD).
Further enquiries:
Birgit Holthaus
cfaed press officer
+49 351 463-42848