I've made a bunch of cancer-causing virus as a grad student. After all the COVID lab leak stuff, it's become a story I need to preface with the fact that it was all zero-risk in terms of leaking out of the lab, and the only person at risk was myself.
The virus was specifically missing the ability to replicate, but it did have the ability to infect cells in a dish. That means it was just BSL-2 stuff. Our lab studied cancer, so we'd mostly infect them with cancer-causing things like a mutated PI3K that would fluoresce so we could track it in the cell with a microscope. If people are curious, we'd mostly work with lentivirus.
It's a dream of mind to make some of the cool sorts of mechanical things people are posting here. I have multiple drawers with arduinos and components, but so far my projects hit a wall because of my lack of skill hehe. Practice makes perfect!
That's so cool! Bioengineering things like that blows my mind. We (humanity) can take bacteria edit their DNA and make them produce all sorts of useful things. Enzymes, insulin, flavorings, colored dye. Some of that's old technology, too, it's just that petroleum based processes are cheaper that we use them instead of using bacteria for things.
The virus was specifically missing the ability to replicate, but it did have the ability to infect cells in a dish. That means it was just BSL-2 stuff. Our lab studied cancer, so we'd mostly infect them with cancer-causing things like a mutated PI3K that would fluoresce so we could track it in the cell with a microscope. If people are curious, we'd mostly work with lentivirus.
It's a dream of mind to make some of the cool sorts of mechanical things people are posting here. I have multiple drawers with arduinos and components, but so far my projects hit a wall because of my lack of skill hehe. Practice makes perfect!