Maastricht Science Programme in international biology competition in Boston
For the first time, 11 students of the Maastricht Science Programme have the opportunity to participate in the international, prestigious synthetic biology competition International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition. During this event, teams get the opportunity to present their ideas to the iGEM community. It takes place in November 2019 in Boston, USA.
iGEM Competition
The International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition is a worldwide synthetic biology competition organised by the Massachusetts Institute of Techology (MIT). The iGEM competition gives students the opportunity to push the boundaries of synthetic biology by tackling everyday issues facing the world. Made up of primarily university students, multidisciplinary teams work together to design, build, test, and measure a system of their own design using interchangeable biological parts and standard molecular biology techniques. Every year nearly 6,000 people dedicate their summer to iGEM and then come together in the fall to present their work and compete at the annual Jamboree.
The Maastricht Science Programme project
The project the team from Maastricht Science Programme wants to present in Boston aims to create an easy-to-use tool for scientists. This tool could be used to recognise emerging diseases or environmental pollutants (with the help of molecules). In other words, it might solve modern world problems. Moreover, they want to develop an online and open database, containing the information acquired with the tool. This would enable an easy exchange of knowledge between scientists all over the world.
Why the project matters
With their research project, they could not only advance the field of science, but also contribute to the international recognition and presence of Maastricht, its university, the Maastricht Science Programme and the province of Limburg. But most of all, the project contributes to society, health and the environment. Therefore, it will probably be important in your future as well.
Also read
-
Municipality of Heerlen, Parkstad Urban Region and UM invest 6 million in collaboration
Heerlen grants a one-time contribution of €1,478,050 to Maastricht University as part of the Regio Deal application ‘Fundament onder UM-onderwijs in Heerlen’. This amount comes from the Fonds Economische Structuurversterking (FES). The funding will help establish university education facilities in...
-
Creating added value with biobased and circular materials
On March 20, 2025, experts from the agricultural and chemical worlds gathered at the Brightlands Chemelot Campus in Geleen for the Agro Meets Smart Materials meeting. The central question: how can agricultural crops and residual flows contribute to the development of sustainable, circular materials...
-
Maastricht will host the 2026 World Conference on Computational Intelligence
In 2026, three major conferences on computational intelligence will convene in Maastricht simultaneously. The IEEE World Conference on Computational Intelligence (IEEE WCCI) will be the world's largest technical event in computer science, focusing on applications such as artificial intelligence.