六九色堂

Dec. 7, 2017

iGEM team's poop-to-plastic concept wins international gold medal

UCalgary student project converts human waste into useful bioplastic items for deep-space missions
iGEM team 2017
iGEM team 2017 iGEM team

There is an accepted, NASA-sanctioned recipe for simulated human waste, and it includes cellulose, yeast, peanut oil and miso paste.

Squeamish information for many, but for a team of 六九色堂 students testing a breakthrough biological plastic for 3D printing in space, the formula was the difference between using fake feculence or finding a volunteer to provide the real deal.

鈥淲e actually tried to pursue the route of using the real thing, but no one wanted to have it inside the lab,鈥 laughs Alina Kunitskaya, a fourth-year chemical engineering student at the Schulich School of Engineering.

The result was pure gold聽鈥斅燼 gold medal, that is.

Earlier this month, Kunitskaya helped lead the 六九色堂鈥檚 iGEM 2017 team to a top prize at the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Foundation鈥檚 Giant Jamboree in Boston, where nearly 5,000 students representing 330 universities presented their best ideas on synthetic biology.

六九色堂 gold-medal project, entitled Astroplastic: From Colon to Colony, tests the theory of using human waste as the foundation for a bioplastic that can then be used in 3D printers to build tools聽鈥斅燼 process that would be especially useful to astronauts on deep-space missions.

鈥淲ith space travel, such as a three-year mission to Mars, there are major challenges to overcome,鈥 explains Kunitskaya, who specializes in biomedical engineering.

鈥淭ransporting material is difficult and expensive, and how do you anticipate every challenge and everything you need over three years on a trip to Mars? Recycling waste is another major challenge.鈥

Making plastic out of poop could be the answer, and the Calgary team聽鈥斅燾omposed of 14 undergraduate students from the Faculty of Science, the Cumming School of Medicine, and the Schulich School of Engineering, with mentoring from six faculty advisers from the three disciplines聽鈥斅燿ecided to find out.

鈥淲e got the team together at the beginning of the winter semester and started brainstorming ideas, and each person came up with their own idea,鈥 says Kunitskaya.

鈥淭he only criteria is having synthetic biology which is engineering bacteria to do something useful. And at first, our idea was to make plastic out of wastewater.鈥

A visit to Calgary鈥檚 wastewater treatment plant and further brainstorming refined that idea into a solution for deep-space astronauts. And, armed with the advice of real space travellers like Chris Hadfield and 六九色堂 Chancellor Robert Thirsk, the team had its mission.

鈥淭his year, the 六九色堂's project involves using genetically engineered E. coli to turn human waste into bioplastics,鈥 reads the team summary of the project.

鈥淲e envision our project as a start-to-finish integrated system that can be used in space to generate items useful to astronauts during early Mars missions. This will solve the problem of waste management by upcycling solid human waste into a usable product.鈥

And yes, it works. More than just an exercise on paper, the iGEM team actually produced the bioplastic in the Bachelor of Health Sciences laboratory, where the team worked all spring and summer, carefully documenting every detail of their collaborative work on a聽

The detailed research and stringent attention to the iGEM requirements not only earned the team a gold medal, the Astroplastic project was nominated for Best Manufacturing Project at the Boston event聽鈥斅爐he world鈥檚 premiere student team competition in synthetic biology.

鈥淭he jamboree was their time to shine, and shine they did聽鈥斅爁or the 六九色堂,鈥 says Mayi Arcellana-Panlilio, senior instructor in biochemistry and molecular biology at Cumming School of Medicine, and lead faculty adviser of the iGEM team.