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 Glossary 
 Abstraction -- a term borrowed from software engineering to indicate the management of complexity inherent to biological parts and the systems made with them. Abstraction simplifies components by hiding, or "black boxing" information, facilitating their use and re-useBiosafety level -- precautions and containment rules for safely working with biological agents in laboratory facilitiesCloning -- recombinant DNA molecules inserted into a plasmid or virus "vector." The vector must then be introduced into a host cell without killing itDevice -- an engineered genetic object that produces a human-defined function under specified conditions. Devices are produced by combining one or more standard biological partsDNA Synthesis -- chemical assembly of nucleotides in a specified orderGel electrophoresis -- the use of current to draw a polymer (like DNA or proteins) through a sieving matrix, separating the polymers by size. Most often agarose is the matrix used for DNA electrophoresis, and polyacrylamide is the matrix used for proteinsiGEM -- the international Genetically Engineered Machine competition in which teams of undergraduates build living systems from standardized, biological partsInverter -- takes an input signal and produces the opposite output signal, e.g., HIGH input produces LOW output and vice versa. An inverter functions like a Boolean NOTMeasurement -- the quantitative assessment of a biological function. Measurements can be made of a part, device or systemOpen Reading Frame -- the DNA pattern of triplet sequences that encode a proteinPart -- a nucleic acid-encoded biological functionPCR -- a technique for amplifying DNA of known or unknown sequence. The reactions require only 4 components: DNA to be amplified, oligonucleotide primers to bind sequences flanking the target, dNTPs to polymerize into new DNA chains, and a heat stable polymerase in a buffered solution to carry out the synthesis reactionPlasmid -- a circular, double-stranded DNA molecule typically containing a few thousand base pairs that replicates within a cell independently of the chromosomal DNA. Plasmid DNA is easily purified from cells, manipulated using common lab techniques and incorporated into cellsPromoter -- sequence of DNA to which RNA polymerase binds for initiation of transcriptionRestriction Enzyme -- an enzyme that recognizes and cleaves a specific DNA sequenceRibosome Binding Site -- the sequence of RNA to which ribosome binds for initiation of translationStandardization -- a series of assembly and characterization rules. In time, these standards may allow the reliable physical and functional assembly of genetic parts into devices, and devices into systemsTranscription -- the reaction that converts of DNA-templated information to RNA. This reaction is catalyzed by one of several RNA polymerasesTranscriptional Terminator -- a sequence of DNA that signals the RNA polymerase to cease the synthesis of RNA. Terminator sequences are often inverted repeats in the DNA that fold into stem-loop structures, leading the RNA polymerase to pause and leave the DNA it is transcribingTranslation -- the reaction that converts RNA-templated information to protein. This reaction is catalyzed by ribosomes
 NavigationSynthetic Biology and the High School CurriculumSynthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: Lab 1Synthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: Lab 2Synthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: Lab 3Synthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: Lab 4Synthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: EssaySynthetic Biology and the High School Curriculum: GlossaryLab Report Rubric ( pdf) and Lab Report ScoreSheet ( pdf)Essay Rubric ( pdf) and Essay Scoresheet ( pdf)SynBio and the HS Curriculum Teacher's Resource Room
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