Difference between revisions of "BeerDeCoded"

From Hackuarium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 37: Line 37:
 
Events to come:
 
Events to come:
  
* Feb 19, 2016. Swissnex San Francisco. A hands on night on beer microbiology, outreach and entrepreneurship open to Swiss alumni. www.swissnexsanfrancisco.org/event/beerdecoded/
+
* Mar 24, 2016. Decoding Slovenian beers at Ljubljana c/o Biotehna http://www.meetup.com/BioTehna/events/228877465/
 
* Mar 16, 2016. EPFL STIL16: Innovation and Technology exhibition. http://www.salon-stil.ch/index.php
 
* Mar 16, 2016. EPFL STIL16: Innovation and Technology exhibition. http://www.salon-stil.ch/index.php
  
Line 43: Line 43:
  
 
Past events
 
Past events
 +
* Mar 08, 2016 [[Events:Entre_Bière_Hackers_et_ADN_Café_Scientifique_au_Collège_Rousseau |Entre bière, hackers et ADN]] le projet [[BeerDeCoded| BeerDeCoded]] participe au café scientifique du Collège Rousseau (Genève).
 +
* Feb 19, 2016. Swissnex San Francisco. A hands on night on beer microbiology, outreach and entrepreneurship open to Swiss alumni. www.swissnexsanfrancisco.org/event/beerdecoded/
 
* Nov 28, 2015 [[DNA_Party_workchoppe_vol.2|A private party for our Kickstarter backers]] at Hackuarium
 
* Nov 28, 2015 [[DNA_Party_workchoppe_vol.2|A private party for our Kickstarter backers]] at Hackuarium
 
* July 18, 2015 [[DNA_Party_workchoppe_vol.1|First test of the DNA Workchoppe]] at Hackuarium
 
* July 18, 2015 [[DNA_Party_workchoppe_vol.1|First test of the DNA Workchoppe]] at Hackuarium

Revision as of 21:55, 8 March 2016

BeerDeCoded is a quest to sequence the DNA found in 1,000 beers from all over the world.

The project is led by Hackuarium member Gianpaolo Rando and is an iteration of the Open Food DNA project.



Our goals

BeerDeCoded is a research project to draw a genetic map of beers. The public contributes to every step of this project: from securing funding to doing the experiment, from testing (and tasting) the samples to publishing the results. BeerDeCoded is doing-research-together, on the streets, in the bars and in an open laboratory.

The main goals are the following:

  • Democratise DNA analyses
  • Demystify and explain genetic data
  • Produce an open access knowledge database
  • Understand the brewing process better


Beer DNA?

Beer is alive, and therefore it contains DNA. The DNA comes from its ingredients (hops, grains, yeast) and from the microbes that were present on the ingredients and in the brewing environment. There are 1,000+ yeast varieties used for brewing and 200+ hops species, each one bearing a different DNA. Artisanal beer (craft beer) is trendy: microbreweries produce a large variety of beers, each one with its unique recipe and taste. It seems impossible to taste them all, so we are making a "tree of beers" based on their biochemical composition.

What now?

We received the Kickstarter payment and we are actively working on beer DNA extractions, sequencing and bioinformatics.

Want to help us? Drop us a note or join an #OpenHackuarium.

Events

We run BeerDeCoded workshops at Hackuarium or at public events. We can load a miniaturized laboratory on a cargo-bike and bring beer DNA sequencing everywhere.

Events to come:

If you want BeerDeCoded at your event, please contact gianpaolo.rando@swissdecode.ch

Past events

  • NCCR Retreat in Chemical Biology
  • GEW Geneva

How do we finance the project?

At LIFT15 conference in Geneva, we discussed the project during a science crowdfunding workshop.

We then joined the first Science x Kickstarter hackathon in New York City (Feb 28, 2015) to craft a crowdfunding campaign for a pilot experiment.

We have been successfully funded in 20 days in June 2015.

After that, we attracted some sponsorship from local partners.

Budget

Today BeerDeCoded runs on a voluntary basis. We pay reagents and services. We have funding for sequencing 96 beers. Rough project costs:

  • 500 CHF - Beer collection
  • 1000 CHF - DNA purification (we extract DNA out of the beer)
  • 5500 CHF - DNA amplification and multiplexing (we amplify the DNA, we label it with a ID code and we pool the labeled samples inside a sequencer)
  • 3000 CHF - DNA sequencing.

Other steps (manpower, bioinformatic analyses, data visualisation and communication) are done on a voluntary basis.

Team

Gianpaolo Rando leads the Open Food DNA project. He holds a Ph.D in biotechnology and has 10 years of experience at the interface between genomics and nutrition. He is a proud member of Hackurium, has a passion for food and drinks and wants to expand the project to beer and other beverages (fb.com/BeerDeCoded).

Jonathan Sobel

Nicolas

Luc Henry holds a DPhil in chemical biology and has a genuine interest in the impact of new technologies on society, in particular in the fields of biotechnology and health. He is the co-founder of Hackuarium and wants to promote an open approach to science and innovation.

Any question?

Contact us via Gianpaolo Rando, Jonathan Sobel or Luc Henry.

BeerDeCoded on the Web


More on Social Media


What Others Do