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For a downloadable and printable version of this page, see the [http://openwetware.org/images/a/a8/MITiGEMsponsorship.pdf PDF]. | |||
__TOC__ | |||
<font face="trebuchet ms"> | |||
{| width=600px | |||
| <font face="trebuchet ms"> '''Drew Endy'''<br> | |||
Cabot Assistant Professor of Biological Engineering, MIT<br> | |||
Endy Lab., MIT 68-580<br> | |||
77 Mass. Ave.<br> | |||
Cambridge, MA 02139<br> | |||
USA<br> | |||
Phone: +1 617.253.5494<br> | |||
Email: endy@mit.edu<br></font> | |||
|<font face="trebuchet ms"> '''Thomas F. Knight, Jr.'''<br> | |||
Senior Research Scientist, MIT<br> | |||
MIT CSAIL<br> | |||
32 Vassar Street, Room 32-312<br> | |||
Cambridge, MA 02139<br> | |||
USA<br> | |||
Phone: +1 617.253.7807<br> | |||
Email: tk@csail.mit.edu<br></font> | |||
|} | |||
'''Date:''' May 5, 2006 | |||
'''Re:''' Sponsorship of the MIT undergraduate student design team for the iGEM competition | |||
'''From:''' Drew Endy and Tom Knight | |||
'''When:''' Summer 2006 | |||
[[Image:Igem2006logo.gif|200px|left]] | |||
<br style="clear:both" /> | |||
<font size=4>'''''International Genetically Engineered Machines competition'''''</font> | |||
<font size=4>'''''http://igem.mit.edu'''''</font> | |||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
The international Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) competition is a team-based challenge in which 39 schools and over 400 students from around the world compete to design engineered biological systems. Typical projects involve engineering a microbe (bacteria or yeast) to perform a novel function. Students design, build and test their system over the summer before coming together at MIT in November to demonstrate their projects to the other teams. | |||
In addition to running the iGEM competition, MIT also fields its own team. This year’s team consists of six MIT undergraduates from diverse backgrounds. We are seeking funding for the MIT team to ensure both a tremendous learning experience for the team members and a chance to succeed against other teams. | |||
[[Image:MITiGEM2006b.jpg|400px|left]] | |||
<br style="clear:both" /> | |||
''Members of MIT’s iGEM team 2006. See the team bio’s below.'' | |||
== | ==Sponsorship== | ||
We are soliciting monetary and in-kind donations from individuals and businesses to support the MIT team. These funds are critical to the MIT team’s continuing success in its own competition. Donations will be applied toward team expenses including but not limited to: | |||
#Student stipends (Six students, ~$20k) | |||
#Lab materials costs (~$10k) | |||
#Commercial DNA synthesis of novel biological parts (~$20k) | |||
In the | '''''In donating to the MIT iGEM team, you will:''''' | ||
#help train the next generation of biological engineers | |||
#contribute to the growth of the emerging field of synthetic biology | |||
#receive invitations to the iGEM jamboree in November 2006 at the MIT campus where teams from across the world present their projects. | |||
#be acknowledged on team T-shirts and the team website as a sponsor. (Logo/font size will scale linearly with the size of the donation). | |||
<font size=3>'''To donate to the MIT iGEM team:'''</font> [https://giving.mit.edu/givenow/AddGift.dyn?desig=2738692 https://giving.mit.edu/images/give_now.gif] | |||
Donations to the MIT iGEM team are made via MIT and thus are a [https://giving.mit.edu/ways/cash/index.html charitable gift]. | |||
==Goals of our team== | |||
== | #'''Educate a new generation of talented biological engineers''' | ||
#'''Develop cutting edge synthetic biology technology''' | |||
#'''Grow the field of synthetic biology''' | |||
#'''Cement MIT's position as a leader in synthetic biology''' | |||
==The success of iGEM== | |||
===2003 & 2004=== | |||
During MIT's Independent Activity Periods (IAP) of January 2003 and 2004, student teams designed glowing bacterial oscillators that blinked on and off and designed pattern-forming bacteria. | |||
===Summer 2004=== | |||
The summer of 2004 brought the first Synthetic Biology Competition. Student teams from five schools competed to build cellular finite state machines: Boston University, Caltech, MIT, Princeton, and UT-Austin. The most developed project was UT, Austin’s “photographic bacteria" that could capture a light image on a layer of cells. In November of 2005, this system was published in Nature. | |||
[[Image:UT HelloWorld.jpg|130px]] | |||
''This image was fixed on a layer of bacteria using light by students at UT Austin and UCSF.'' | |||
<br style="clear:both" /> | |||
===2005=== | |||
In the summer of 2005, student teams from 13 schools (Berkeley, Caltech, Cambridge UK, Davidson, ETH Zurich, Harvard, MIT, Oklahoma, Penn State, Princeton, Toronto, UCSF, and UT Austin) participated in the 2005 iGEM competition. Projects included cells that could swim toward stimuli, communicate with each other, sense temperatures, perform relay races, and count. | |||
==MIT iGEM team profile== | |||
This year’s MIT iGEM team consists of six MIT undergraduates from diverse backgrounds. | |||
'''''Kate Broadbent'''''<br> | |||
Kate is a freshman, expecting to declare as a chemical or biological engineer. In her spare time she manages to be one of the United States' top young equestrians. This summer, she's excited about working with bacteria rather than horses! | |||
'''''Andre Green'''''<br> | |||
Andre, from Louisiana, is a sophomore in biological engineering. That makes him one of the first of MIT's biological engineering majors. He's been spending his summers working in numerous molecular biology labs so he's very excited about the chance to engineer a biological system. | |||
'''''Stephen Payne'''''<br> | |||
Stephen is also one of the new generation of MIT biological engineers. Stephen spent last summer working with the MIT Registry of Standard Biological Parts. With that experience under his belt, Stephen knows exactly what BioBricks he wants to use in MIT's biological machine this summer! | |||
'''''Veena Venkatachalam'''''<br> | |||
Veena is a freshman, hoping to major in biological engineering or chemistry next year. Veena is relishing the opportunity to actually construct a biological system and get to see it working. Veena was one of two national winners of the Siemens-Westinghouse Advanced Placement Scholarship last year. | |||
'''''Boyuan Zhu'''''<br> | |||
Bo is a freshman who expects to be involved in biotechnology whether he decides on electrical or biological engineering. With experience as an entrepeneur and a researcher, Bo is excited about the opportunity to work on a field with such commercial and scientific potential. Last year he was one of the winners of the Microsoft/VC Angel Roundtable Business Plan Competition. | |||
===Advisors=== | |||
Five graduate students from the departments of Biological Engineering and EECS will advise MIT’s iGEM team: | |||
'''''Barry Canton'''''<br> | |||
Beng, MEngSc in Mechanical Engineering, University College, Dublin | |||
'''''Austin Che'''''<br> | |||
MS in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, MIT; BS in Computer Science, AB in Psychology, Stanford University | |||
'''''Jason Kelly'''''<br> | |||
BS in Chemical Engineering and Biology, MIT | |||
'''''Reshma Shetty'''''<br> | |||
BS in Computer Science, University of Utah | |||
'''''Samantha Sutton'''''<br> | |||
BS in Electrical Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. | |||
Drs. Drew Endy and Tom Knight will serve as faculty advisors. | |||
==iGEM in the news== | |||
The iGEM competition has received extensive press coverage in both the mainstream and scientific press. See Appendix A for a compilation of articles on the competition. | |||
''“At the world’s foremost centres of learning, a potentially revolutionary science is taking shape. The central idea of the field is that by drawing on knowledge developed from biology and applying principles used in engineering design and production it is now possible to create bio-synthetic systems to achieve novel applications with unprecedented power and efficiency. Students from Cambridge University experimenting in this field have had their work featured in the prestigious Nature magazine after competing recently in an international contest - iGEM - that challenged them to design and build machines entirely from biological components such as genes and proteins.”'' - London Press Service – 3/20/2006 | |||
==Appendix A: iGEM in the news== | |||
A compilation of press articles on iGEM. | |||
===Mainstream=== | ===Mainstream=== | ||
*[http://www.londonpress.info/lps/article.asp?uniqueID=5831&category=science The March of the Bio-Machines Advances] - London Press - 3/20/06 | *[http://www.londonpress.info/lps/article.asp?uniqueID=5831&category=science The March of the Bio-Machines Advances] - London Press - 3/20/06 | ||
*[http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/science/20051214-9999-lz1c14circuit.html Controlling organisms with biological circuits opens up a world of possibilities and dangers] - San Diego Union Tribune - 12/6/05 | *[http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/science/20051214-9999-lz1c14circuit.html Controlling organisms with biological circuits opens up a world of possibilities and dangers] - San Diego Union Tribune - 12/6/05 | ||
Line 33: | Line 141: | ||
===Science=== | ===Science=== | ||
*[http://www.biospectrumasia.com/content/270406IND636.asp Synthetic biology] - BioSpectrum Asia Edition - 4/27/06 | |||
*[http://www.scitechinfo.com/node/520 7 from Penn State enter the Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition] - Sci/Tech News Service - 2/06/06 | *[http://www.scitechinfo.com/node/520 7 from Penn State enter the Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition] - Sci/Tech News Service - 2/06/06 | ||
*[http://www.jumpingelectrons.com/Technology/Bacteria-Photograph.asp Live Photographs] - Jumping Electrons - 12/12/06 | *[http://www.jumpingelectrons.com/Technology/Bacteria-Photograph.asp Live Photographs] - Jumping Electrons - 12/12/06 | ||
*[http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20051210/bob9.asp The Sum of the Parts] - Science News - 12/10/06 | *[http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20051210/bob9.asp The Sum of the Parts] - Science News - 12/10/06 | ||
*[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v438/n7067/full/438417a.html Synthetic Biology: Designs on Life] - Nature - 11/24/05 | *[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v438/n7067/full/438417a.html Synthetic Biology: Designs on Life] - Nature - 11/24/05 | ||
*[http://www.bio-itworld.com/newsitems/2005/nov2005/11-08-05-news-igem iGEM 2005: Synthetic Biology’s Future] - Bio IT World.com - 11/8/2005 | *[http://www.bio-itworld.com/newsitems/2005/nov2005/11-08-05-news-igem iGEM 2005: Synthetic Biology’s Future] - Bio IT World.com - 11/8/2005 | ||
Line 60: | Line 168: | ||
*[http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2005/08.25/00-biomech.html Undergraduates spend summer creating living machines] - Harvard - 8/25/05 | *[http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2005/08.25/00-biomech.html Undergraduates spend summer creating living machines] - Harvard - 8/25/05 | ||
*[http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/archives/2005/02/03/news/11891.shtml Students build bio-circuits] - Daily Princetonian - 2/3/2005 | *[http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/archives/2005/02/03/news/11891.shtml Students build bio-circuits] - Daily Princetonian - 2/3/2005 | ||
==Appendix B: Geographical distribution of 2006 iGEM teams== | |||
[[Image:IGEM2006worldmap.gif|800px|left]] | |||
</font> |
Latest revision as of 13:01, 13 April 2007
For a downloadable and printable version of this page, see the PDF.
Drew Endy Cabot Assistant Professor of Biological Engineering, MIT |
Thomas F. Knight, Jr. Senior Research Scientist, MIT |
Date: May 5, 2006
Re: Sponsorship of the MIT undergraduate student design team for the iGEM competition
From: Drew Endy and Tom Knight
When: Summer 2006
International Genetically Engineered Machines competition
Overview
The international Genetically Engineered Machines (iGEM) competition is a team-based challenge in which 39 schools and over 400 students from around the world compete to design engineered biological systems. Typical projects involve engineering a microbe (bacteria or yeast) to perform a novel function. Students design, build and test their system over the summer before coming together at MIT in November to demonstrate their projects to the other teams.
In addition to running the iGEM competition, MIT also fields its own team. This year’s team consists of six MIT undergraduates from diverse backgrounds. We are seeking funding for the MIT team to ensure both a tremendous learning experience for the team members and a chance to succeed against other teams.
Members of MIT’s iGEM team 2006. See the team bio’s below.
Sponsorship
We are soliciting monetary and in-kind donations from individuals and businesses to support the MIT team. These funds are critical to the MIT team’s continuing success in its own competition. Donations will be applied toward team expenses including but not limited to:
- Student stipends (Six students, ~$20k)
- Lab materials costs (~$10k)
- Commercial DNA synthesis of novel biological parts (~$20k)
In donating to the MIT iGEM team, you will:
- help train the next generation of biological engineers
- contribute to the growth of the emerging field of synthetic biology
- receive invitations to the iGEM jamboree in November 2006 at the MIT campus where teams from across the world present their projects.
- be acknowledged on team T-shirts and the team website as a sponsor. (Logo/font size will scale linearly with the size of the donation).
To donate to the MIT iGEM team: https://giving.mit.edu/images/give_now.gif
Donations to the MIT iGEM team are made via MIT and thus are a charitable gift.
Goals of our team
- Educate a new generation of talented biological engineers
- Develop cutting edge synthetic biology technology
- Grow the field of synthetic biology
- Cement MIT's position as a leader in synthetic biology
The success of iGEM
2003 & 2004
During MIT's Independent Activity Periods (IAP) of January 2003 and 2004, student teams designed glowing bacterial oscillators that blinked on and off and designed pattern-forming bacteria.
Summer 2004
The summer of 2004 brought the first Synthetic Biology Competition. Student teams from five schools competed to build cellular finite state machines: Boston University, Caltech, MIT, Princeton, and UT-Austin. The most developed project was UT, Austin’s “photographic bacteria" that could capture a light image on a layer of cells. In November of 2005, this system was published in Nature.
This image was fixed on a layer of bacteria using light by students at UT Austin and UCSF.
2005
In the summer of 2005, student teams from 13 schools (Berkeley, Caltech, Cambridge UK, Davidson, ETH Zurich, Harvard, MIT, Oklahoma, Penn State, Princeton, Toronto, UCSF, and UT Austin) participated in the 2005 iGEM competition. Projects included cells that could swim toward stimuli, communicate with each other, sense temperatures, perform relay races, and count.
MIT iGEM team profile
This year’s MIT iGEM team consists of six MIT undergraduates from diverse backgrounds.
Kate Broadbent
Kate is a freshman, expecting to declare as a chemical or biological engineer. In her spare time she manages to be one of the United States' top young equestrians. This summer, she's excited about working with bacteria rather than horses!
Andre Green
Andre, from Louisiana, is a sophomore in biological engineering. That makes him one of the first of MIT's biological engineering majors. He's been spending his summers working in numerous molecular biology labs so he's very excited about the chance to engineer a biological system.
Stephen Payne
Stephen is also one of the new generation of MIT biological engineers. Stephen spent last summer working with the MIT Registry of Standard Biological Parts. With that experience under his belt, Stephen knows exactly what BioBricks he wants to use in MIT's biological machine this summer!
Veena Venkatachalam
Veena is a freshman, hoping to major in biological engineering or chemistry next year. Veena is relishing the opportunity to actually construct a biological system and get to see it working. Veena was one of two national winners of the Siemens-Westinghouse Advanced Placement Scholarship last year.
Boyuan Zhu
Bo is a freshman who expects to be involved in biotechnology whether he decides on electrical or biological engineering. With experience as an entrepeneur and a researcher, Bo is excited about the opportunity to work on a field with such commercial and scientific potential. Last year he was one of the winners of the Microsoft/VC Angel Roundtable Business Plan Competition.
Advisors
Five graduate students from the departments of Biological Engineering and EECS will advise MIT’s iGEM team:
Barry Canton
Beng, MEngSc in Mechanical Engineering, University College, Dublin
Austin Che
MS in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, MIT; BS in Computer Science, AB in Psychology, Stanford University
Jason Kelly
BS in Chemical Engineering and Biology, MIT
Reshma Shetty
BS in Computer Science, University of Utah
Samantha Sutton
BS in Electrical Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Drs. Drew Endy and Tom Knight will serve as faculty advisors.
iGEM in the news
The iGEM competition has received extensive press coverage in both the mainstream and scientific press. See Appendix A for a compilation of articles on the competition.
“At the world’s foremost centres of learning, a potentially revolutionary science is taking shape. The central idea of the field is that by drawing on knowledge developed from biology and applying principles used in engineering design and production it is now possible to create bio-synthetic systems to achieve novel applications with unprecedented power and efficiency. Students from Cambridge University experimenting in this field have had their work featured in the prestigious Nature magazine after competing recently in an international contest - iGEM - that challenged them to design and build machines entirely from biological components such as genes and proteins.” - London Press Service – 3/20/2006
Appendix A: iGEM in the news
A compilation of press articles on iGEM.
Mainstream
- The March of the Bio-Machines Advances - London Press - 3/20/06
- Controlling organisms with biological circuits opens up a world of possibilities and dangers - San Diego Union Tribune - 12/6/05
- The Biological Camera - Seed Magazine - 11/29/05
- Live From the Lab, a Culture Worth a Thousand Words - New York Times - 11/24/05
Science
- Synthetic biology - BioSpectrum Asia Edition - 4/27/06
- 7 from Penn State enter the Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition - Sci/Tech News Service - 2/06/06
- Live Photographs - Jumping Electrons - 12/12/06
- The Sum of the Parts - Science News - 12/10/06
- Synthetic Biology: Designs on Life - Nature - 11/24/05
- iGEM 2005: Synthetic Biology’s Future - Bio IT World.com - 11/8/2005
- Synthetic Life Research Shows Progress—And Raises Questions - American Association for the Advancement of Science - 11/5/2005
- The List: R&D Projects that must get done - EE Times - 8/8/05
- Life: Reinvented - Wired - 1/05
- Starting from scratch Nature - 11/6/04
- Conference hones tools for synthetic bio revolution - EE Times - 6/21/04
- Conference kicks off synthetic bio revolution - EE Times - 6/15/04
- SYNTHETIC BIOLOGY: Microbes Made to Order - Science - 1/9/2004
Institutional coverage
- Students plan to devote summer to MIT synthetic biology competition - Brown Daily Herald - 3/20/2006
- Endy gives talk on DNA programming - MIT News Office - 3/08/2006
- Ready. Set. Grow!? - Penn State - 1/31/06
- Designs on life - Cambridge - 1/25/06
- The Right Exposure - UT Austin - 12/19/2005
- Genetically engineered machines invade MIT - MIT - 12/17/05
- Students race bacteria in MIT competition - The Digital Collegian at Penn State - 12/08/05
- Davidson Students “Ace” Presentation at MIT Synthetic Biology Competition - Davidson - 11/29/05
- Scientists engineer bacteria to create living photographs UCSF - 11/23/05
- Teams lay BioBrick foundation for genetic engineering - MIT news office - 11/08/05
- Undergraduates spend summer creating living machines - Harvard - 8/25/05
- Students build bio-circuits - Daily Princetonian - 2/3/2005
Appendix B: Geographical distribution of 2006 iGEM teams