International Genetically Engineered Machine

Summary

The iGEM (International Genetically Engineered Machine) competition is a worldwide synthetic biology competition that was initially aimed at undergraduate and 'overgraduate' university students, but has since expanded to include divisions for high school students, entrepreneurs, and community laboratories. iGEM is presented as "the heart of synthetic biology" - educating the next generation of leaders and workforce of the field. In 20 years since its inception, over 80 000 students from over 65 countries have been trained in the responsible, safe and secure use of synthetic biology.

iGEM
Date(s)October, 23 - 26 (2024)
FrequencyAnnually
VenueParis Expo Porte de Versailles, France (2022~)
Hynes Convention Center, Boston, United States (2014-2019)
MIT, Boston, United States (2003-2013)
Location(s)Paris, France (2022~)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States (2003-2019)
With additional events worldwide
Inaugurated2003
Most recent
  • 2023
  • 2022
iGEMersAnnualy: 10 000+ participants, 400+ teams

Since 2003: 80 000+ participants, 4500+ teams
Organised byiGEM Foundation
Websiteigem.org

The iGEM Competition is a flagship program of the iGEM Foundation - an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of synthetic biology, education and competition, and the development of an open, collaborative, and cooperative community. Aside from the competition, iGEM has established many initiatives and programs to support the future growth of synthetic biology throughout the world: iGEM Community, iGEM Technology, iGEM Responsibility, iGEM Startups, and iGEM Leagues.

Competition details edit

Student teams are given a kit (so called ‘Distribution Kit’) of standard, interchangeable parts (so called 'BioBricks') at the beginning of the summer from the Registry of Standard Biological Parts comprising various genetic components such as promoters, terminators, reporter elements, and plasmid backbones. Working at their local laboratories over the summer, they use these parts and new parts of their own design to build biological systems and operate them in living cells.

The teams are free to choose a project, which can build on previous projects or be new to iGEM. Successful projects produce cells that exhibit new and unusual properties by engineering sets of multiple genes together with mechanisms to regulate their expression.

At the end of the summer, the teams add their new BioBricks to the Parts Registry and the scientific community can build upon the expanded set of BioBricks in the next year.

At the annual ‘iGEM Jamboree’ teams from all continents meet in Paris for a scientific expo event and conference where they present their projects to each other and to a scientific jury of ~400 judges. The judges award medals and special prizes to the teams and select a ‘Grand Prize Winner’ team as well as ‘Runner-Up’ teams in each division (High School, Undergraduate and Overgraduate).

Awards & Judging in the iGEM competition edit

Each participant receives a participating certificate (see fig. below) and has the possibility to earn medals (bronze, silver and gold; see fig. below) with their team depending on different criteria that the team fulfilled in the competitions. For a bronze medal it is for example necessary to submit a new part to the Parts Registry, for a silver medal the team is required to document the functionality of a part and for a gold medal it is finally, among other criteria, necessary to obtain a proof-of-principle for the team's project.

In 2016 as an example, 300 teams participated in the competition from which 37% received a gold medal, 25% a silver medal, 26% a bronze medal and 12% were not awarded a medal.

In each division, the best performance in a certain aspect of the competition is honored with special prizes. The special prizes include: 'Best Project' in the respective categories (app. 10 categories), 'Best Art & Design', 'Best Hardware', 'Best Measurement', 'Best Software', 'Best Human Practices', 'Best Model', 'Best New Part', 'Best Poster', 'Best Presentation', 'Best Wiki' and others depending on the competition year. Together with individual certificates, the teams are given glass trophies for each special prize (see fig. below).

From all teams in a respective division, a number of finalists are selected (1 to 6, depending on year and division) and allowed to present their project again in front of all Jamboree participants. From the presented projects all judges select the winner of this year's iGEM competition, the Grand Prize Winner team, who are then awarded a big metal Lego-brick (see fig. below). The winning team may keep this challenge trophy for a year until it gets awarded to the next 'Grand Prize Winner'. Participants of a 'Grand Prize Winner' team are also given challenge coins of the respective year (see fig. below).

History of the competition edit

Growth of the annual iGEM Jamboree[1]
Year No. of participants
2004
31(5 teams)
2005
125(13 teams)
2006
723(32 teams)
2007
777(54 teams)
2008
1,248(88 teams)
2009
1,840(113 teams)
2010
2,327(128 teams)
2011
2,586(165 teams)
2012
3,696(190 teams)
2013
4,027(215 teams)
2014
4,515(245 teams)
2015
5,018(280 teams)
2016
4,432(300 teams)
2017
5,386(310 teams)
2018
5,790(340 teams)
2019
6,375(353 teams)
2020
4,800(249 teams)
2021
7,314(350 teams)
2022
7,757(356 teams)
2023
8,541(400 teams)

iGEM developed out of student projects conducted during MIT's Independent Activities Periods in 2003 and 2004.[2][3] Later in 2004, a competition with five teams from various schools was held. In 2005, teams from outside the United States took part for the first time.[4] Since then iGEM has continued to grow, with 130 teams entering in 2010.[5] Randy Rettberg, an engineer who has worked for technology companies including Apple, Sun and BBN,[6] is the founder and president of iGEM.

Because of this increasing size, in the years 2011 - 2013 the competition was split into three regions: Europe, the Americas, and Asia (though teams from Africa and Australia also entered via "Europe" and "Asia" respectively).[7] Regional jamborees occurred during October; and some subset of teams attending those events were selected to advance to the World Championship at MIT in November.[8]

In January 2012 the iGEM Foundation was spun out of MIT as an independent non-profit organization located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. The iGEM Foundation supports scientific research and education through operating the iGEM competition. The same year, iGEM expanded into having not only the Collegiate division, but also competitions for entrepreneurs and high school students.

For their tenth anniversary, iGEM added new tracks to the existing ones: Art & Design, Community Labs, Entrepreneurship, Measurement, Microfluidics, Policy & Practice, and Software. Although Entrepreneurship and Software were tracks in previous years, in 2014 they were made more distinct in terms of their judging requirements.[9] Furthermore, in 2014 iGEM did not have regional jamborees, but instead hosted a giant jamboree so every team could participate in one conference in Cambridge unlike in previous years where only the regional finalists were brought to Cambridge.[10]

The iGEM Jamborees for 2020 and 2021 were held online, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Starting in 2022, the event was redesigned and rebranded to the iGEM Grand Jamboree, held in the Paris Expo Porte de Versailles.

Broader goals edit

Beyond just building biological systems, broader goals of iGEM include:

  • To enable the systematic engineering of biology.
  • To promote the open and transparent development of tools for engineering biology.
  • And to help construct a society that can productively and safely[11] apply biological technology.

iGEM's dual aspects of self-organization and imaginative manipulation of genetic material have demonstrated a new way to arouse student interest in modern biology and to develop their independent learning skills.

Competition Results edit

 
Best iGEM Medal by Country - All Divisions (until 2019).
  Gold Medal
  Silver Medal
  Bronze Medal

High School Division edit

 
Grand Prize Winners by Country - High School (until 2019).
  1 Title
  2 Titles
  3 Titles
  4 Titles
Top High School Teams by Year
Grand Prize 2nd 3rd Complete Results
2023 Japan-United   BASIS-China   iGEM 2023
2022 Lambert_GA   PuiChing_Macau   iGEM 2022
2021 LINKS_China   SZ_SHD   iGEM 2021
2020 TAS Taipei   GreatBay SCIE   iGEM 2020
2019 GreatBay SZ   iGEM 2019[permanent dead link]
2018 GreatBay China  [note 1] iGEM 2018[permanent dead link]
2017 TAS Taipei   iGEM 2017
2016 HSiTAIWAN   iGEM 2016
2015 TAS Taipei   iGEM HS 2015
2014 CSIA-SouthKorea   TP CC-SanDiego  [note 2] TAS Taipei  iGEM HS 2014
2013 Lethbridge Canada   AUC Turkey   CIDEB-UANL Mexico   iGEM HS 2013
2012 Heidelberg LSL   NC School of Sci Math   CIDEB-UANL Mexico   iGEM HS 2012
2011 Years prior to 2012 had no separate high school division.

Undergraduate Division edit

 
Grand Prize Winners by Country/Region - Undergrad (until 2019).
  1 Title
  2 Titles
  3 Titles
Top Undergraduate Teams by Year
Grand Prize 2nd 3rd Complete Results
2023 McGill   Vilnius-Lithuania   NUS-Singapore   iGEM 2023
2022 TU-Eindhoven   INSA_Lyon1   HKUST   iGEM 2022
2021 Toulouse INSA-UPS   NUS-Singapore   Shanghai Tech China   iGEM 2021
2020 Vilnius-Lithuania   Toulouse INSA-UPS   XMU China   iGEM 2020
2019 NCKU Tainan   Calgary   TU Kaiserslautern   iGEM 2019[permanent dead link]
2018 Valencia   UC San Diego   SZU-China   iGEM 2018[permanent dead link]
2017 Vilnius-Lithuania   William and Mary   Heidelberg   iGEM 2017
2016 Imperial   Sydney Australia   SCAU-China   iGEM 2016
2015 William and Mary   Czech Republic   Heidelberg   iGEM 2015
2014 Heidelberg   Imperial   NCTU Formosa   iGEM 2014
2013 Heidelberg   TU Munich   Imperial   iGEM 2013[note 3]
2012 Groningen   Ljubljana   Paris Bettencourt  [note 4] LMU Munich   iGEM 2012
2011 Washington   Imperial   ZJU China   MIT   iGEM 2011 [note 5]
2010 Ljubljana   Peking   BCCS Bristol   Cambridge   Imperial   TU Delft   iGEM 2010 Archived 2013-01-12 at archive.today
2009 Cambridge   Heidelberg   Valencia   Freiburg   Groningen   Imperial   iGEM 2009 Archived 2013-01-13 at archive.today
2008 Ljubljana   Freiburg   Caltech   Harvard   NYMU Taipei   UC Berkeley   iGEM 2008
2007 Peking   Paris   Ljubljana   UC Berkeley   UCSF   USTC   iGEM 2007 [note 6]
2006 Ljubljana   Imperial   Princeton   iGEM 2006
2005 Years prior to 2006 had no specific winners. iGEM 2005
2004 IAP 2004, SBC 2004
2003 IAP 2003

Overgraduate Division edit

 
Grand Prize Winners by Country/Region - Overgrad (until 2019).
  1 Title
  2 Titles
  3 Titles
Top Overgraduate Teams by Year
Grand Prize 2nd 3rd Complete Results
2022 Estonia-TUIT   Leiden   iGEM 2023
2022 UCopenhagen   Montpellier   iGEM 2022
2021 Marburg   TU Delft   iGEM 2021
2020 Leiden   Aachen   iGEM 2020
2019 EPFL   Wageningen UR   iGEM 2019
2018 Marburg   Munich   iGEM 2018[permanent dead link]
2017 TU Delft   Munich  [note 7] iGEM 2017
2016 Munich  [note 8] Wageningen UR   iGEM 2016
2015 TU Delft   BGU Israel   iGEM 2015
2014 UC Davis   Wageningen   TU Darmstadt   iGEM 2014
2013 Paris Bettencourt   Bielefeld   Sun Yat-sen   iGEM 2013[note 9]
2012 Years prior to 2013 had no separate overgraduate division.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Team from seven different high schools.
  2. ^ Combined team from Torrey Pines High School and Canyon Crest Academy.
  3. ^ In 2013 iGEM was divided into an undergraduate and an overgraduate section. The criterion for division was the participation of team members older than 23 years.
  4. ^ Students were from different universities of Paris (Paris Descartes University, Paris Diderot University, Pierre and Marie Curie University).
  5. ^ As of June 2012, the 2011 results page does not include results from the Championship Jamboree; but details can be found at the Jamboree page.
  6. ^ 2007 had six finalists but none were selected as specific runners-up.
  7. ^ Combined team from Technische Universität München and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.
  8. ^ Combined team from Technische Universität München and Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.
  9. ^ In 2013 iGEM was divided into an undergraduate and an overgraduate section. The criterium for division was the participance of team members older than 23 years.

References edit

  1. ^ "iGEM Competitions". igem.org. Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  2. ^ "Learn about iGEM". Retrieved 2013-05-06.
  3. ^ Trafton, Anne. "Rewiring Cells". Technology Review.
  4. ^ "iGEM 2005". Retrieved 2013-05-06.
  5. ^ "Previous iGEM Competitions". iGEM. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  6. ^ Rettberg, R.; Dally, W.J.; Culler, D.E. (1998). "The Bleeding Edge". IEEE Micro. 18. IEEE: 10–11. doi:10.1109/MM.1998.653009.
  7. ^ "Team List 2011". iGEM. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  8. ^ "Jamborees". iGEM. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
  9. ^ "Tracks 2014". iGEM. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  10. ^ "Giant Jamboree". iGEM. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  11. ^ Guan, Zheng-jun; Schmidt, Markus; Pei, Lei; Wei, Wei; Ma, Ke-Ping (2013). "Biosafety Considerations of Synthetic Biology in the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition". BioScience. 63: 25–34. doi:10.1525/bio.2013.63.1.7.

Further reading edit

  • Mooallem, Jon (2010-02-14). "Do-It-Yourself Genetic Engineering". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-05-04.
  • "A Life of Its Own: Where will synthetic biology lead us?". New Yorker. 2009-09-28. Retrieved 2010-05-04.
  • "iGEM Team Funding". Wellcome Trust. Archived from the original on December 2, 2010. Retrieved 2010-12-03.
  • Guan, Zheng-jun; Schmidt, Markus; Pei, Lei; Wei, Wei; Ma, Ke-Ping (2013). "Biosafety Considerations of Synthetic Biology in the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition". BioScience. 63: 25–34. doi:10.1525/bio.2013.63.1.7.

External links edit

  • iGEM
  • Registry of Standard Biological Parts
  • The BioBricks Foundation