TEDx - presenting our project interactively
To get in touch with people from different backgrounds, we decided to present iGEM at the TEDx event in Heidelberg. TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) is a nonprofit organization providing a stage for "ideas worth spreading". Short powerful talks give the audience an insight into a variety of topics and TED hosted renowned speakers like Jennifer Doudna, Stephen Hawking, Craig Venter, Steve Jobs, Bill Clinton and
Lorenz Adlung. To illustrate how evolution is driving nature towards fascinating complexity, we presented an evolutionary game showcasing the causality between randomly occurring mutations and beneficial phenotypes under distinct environmental conditions.
Playing the game, the conference attendees first had to roll a dice. The different sides of the dice thereby represented a specific environmental change or obstacle. For instance, a hot period, a drought or an ice age could come up, thereby causing a need for adaptation (selection pressure). Secondly, we created a wheel of evolution, each field on the wheel representing a single, potentially beneficial variation (mutant) of a protein. In other words, the wheel would represent the gene pool of a specific species. Players of our game could thereby experience how the interplay between random mutation and selection propels nature towards continuous adaptation and invention of novel functions.
Thereby, our evolution game not only introduced the TEDx audience to the concept of Darwinian evolution. It served as starting point for further discussions about our iGEM project on in vivo directed evolution, as well as many other topics including the role of human in the reduction or even extinction of certain species (e.g. the bee population being dramatically reduced, likely due to chemicals used in agriculture), and genetically modified organisms in general. Inspiring conversations with people from various backgrounds offered us an insight into different perspectives towards our project. Surprisingly, the group of non-scientists rather unfamiliar with the details of Darwinian evolution beforehand was particularly excited about our iGEM project ideas once they had played our evolution game and started to think about evolution as a technology.
To receive productive feedback from the TEDx visitors we asked them to write down personal concerns, comments, and desires in context of our project idea and synthetic biology in general. We collected these statements anonymously in our "Synthetic Biology Box”. The very open feedback we received from the TEDx visitors shaped our project from the very beginning. For instance, one visitor noted, that we need to make sure our in vivo directional evolution approach (named PREDCEL for phage-related discontinuous evolution) was used responsibly and for the welfare of humanity. This feedback inspired us build our
"Are you ready to PREDCEL?" question catalogue, which now represents the entry point to our
toolbox and aims at stimulating a responsible as well as technically educated use of our in vivo directed evolution technology. Other TEDx visitors expressed concern that researchers might unintendedly evolve dangerous or hazardous proteins. This feedback inspired us to create
SafetyNet, an online tool aiming to determine whether an input protein sequence would be safe to be used in PREDCEL. SafetyNet first performs a simple blast search and compares the results to a curated database of hazardous (e.g. pathogen-related, toxic or oncogenic) proteins. Then, SafetyNet uses artificial intelligence to infer “sleeping” hazardous potential in the input sequence, which could be accidently evoked during directed evolution in the lab. Hence, our SafetyNet enables researchers to easily test the safety of their evolution experiments prior to actually going to the lab.
Overall, the evaluation of the anonymous TEDx visitor notes revealed that in particular the non‑scientists highly appreciated the opportunity to openly discuss a genetic engineering project prior to its actual implementation in the wet lab and to have a word in its design and setup. On the other hand, it was the open feedback by these people, that stimulated ideas on our side (
SafetyNet,
"Are you ready to PREDCEL?") on how to enable the responsible and safe use of our in vivo directed evolution methods by other iGEM teams as well as outside iGEM.