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I had a fun lunch with Drew Endy today, and with a local iGEM team on Friday.

Here you see my souvenirs, a cartoon primer and a page from the Registry. Don’t lick it, as each yellow spot is a paper blot of DNA. With a special hole punch, you grab the DNA and splice it into E.Coli, the common bacteria in our intestines.

iGEM is the “International Genetically Engineered Machines” contest, where teenage kids reprogram bacteria to smell better or perform various feats, from digital logic with flashing oscillators, to glowing arsenic detectors to biofilms that record pictures (a self-developing “E.Coliroid” if you will).

Each year the projects get more ambitious, as the biological parts are added to the “open source” library of BioBricks.

Recent grand prize winners were from Slovenia and Peking.

Drew is a co-founder of iGEM and a brilliant speaker on synthetic biology. I last saw him when he was still at MIT, and I put together a panel with George Church and Rodney Brooks.

12 responses to “An iGEM page of DNA”

  1. Okay, now we’re definitely, officially, in The Future. Owning a handheld device that can not only contact anybody on the planet, but also access the sum of human knowledge didn’t quite convince me. High school students engineering new organisms for science projects just did it.

  2. wow.

    i remember being disturbed when i first came across sea monkeys about 15 years ago. i mean, how could they put an ® after an initially cryptobiotic shrimp?

    how distant that all seems now.

  3. The ‘creature on the loose’ cartoon is both funny and worrisome. Also that woman’s right hand may need some special attention, looks inflamed.

    Seen on my Flickr home page. (?)

  4. I’m curious about that too… Looks strangely familiar…

    She slimed me

    biotron – I love the top 10 tips at the bottom of your link! Spore-forming animals have a wonderful shelf-life. You can get bigger creatures today…

    A Noodly Encounter

    The registry of biological parts reminds me of the TTL catalog of electronic logic blocks and BIll Gates’ recent observation: “DNA is the most interesting software there is.

  5. heh – thought you might 🙂 – although presented as "traps" they presumably stand as "tips" for the Machiavellian faith-based Guerilla marketing guru…

    interesting "product" from Dr Eugene Hall there – what sort of ® has he put on those incredible beasts? the Diapause Research site is quite interesting… maybe he could have been "released into the room" during Gates’ TED talk to "harvest" the mossies and pop their eggs into diapause?

  6. I was at the IGEM competition where Slovenia won! It was very exciting!

  7. Sweet. I am having lunch again with Drew today. Are you working with any of the teams this year?

  8. Oh cool! I don’t know if he remembers me by name… we’ve met a few times, but say ‘Hi!’ anyway. (We’ve met at ASU a few times, iGEM, and FOO Camp)

    I’m not working with any of the teams directly this year, but I am using the BioBricks design abstraction in a personal project. I’m a fan of his thoughts on methods,,, love the parallelized rolling assembly…

  9. Sweet. I just hope they can provide that stuff to some diybio groups out there someday.

  10. The results are in, and Stanford took the gold in the health/medicine category. Woot!

    See 2009.igem.org/Team:Stanford

    Lots of info in the red bar of links.

    Professor Christopher Anderson at the University of California Berkeley commented: "This is, by far, the best use of synthetic biology as a therapeutic device that I have seen in a very long time."

  11. woot indeed! awesome result 🙂

  12. … and the Cambridge team put together a catchy music video… The Gibson method is in reference to the new assembly technique published by JCVI / SGI.

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