Team:Caltech
From 2012.igem.org
From Biofilms to BiofuelThe iGEM (International Genetically Engineered Machine) competition started with a handful of teams competing at MIT, and has expanded to involve over one hundred and thirty college groups developing and implementing new applications of synthetic biology. Over the summer, teams from each school utilize BioBricks supplied by MIT. BioBricks are genetic libraries of promoters and genes that can be easily incorporated into other organisms’ genomes. This allows for relatively quick manipulation of organisms to express a certain product or perform a new function. For example, the 2008 Caltech iGEM team, which won third place, manipulated E. coli (a beneficial resident of the intestine) to produce anti-pathenogenic products in addition to its typical functions in the body. The genetically engineered E. coli supplemented its typical role in the gut to mimic white blood cells’ anti-pathenogenic properties elsewhere in the body (1).
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