My good friend Natalie Kuldell and I had the pleasure of participating at a recent Soapbox session hosted by the MIT Museum on DIY biology. (Though frankly, I prefer the term DIY bioengineering, because I think hobbyists are going to be a lot more excited by what they can build than by what they can study in the natural world.)
Probably the best part of the evening was when the audience got to answer two questions.
If you could build anything out of biology, what would you build and why?
What would you ask your neighbors if they were building this organism in the house next door to you?
I think the DIY bioengineering community has a lot that they could contribute to synthetic biology and the world in general. But the safety risks and public perception issues can't be ignored. Personally, I'd love to see the community coalesce around a DIYbioengineering model organism. For example, some of the recent suggestions on the DIYbio.org email list have been
Acinetobacter - a naturally competent BL1 organism
Moss - again it's readily transformable and it's moss! How cool is that!?!
Halobacterium - this organism is native to the Great Salt Lake and only grows in media with high salt concentration. This feature has the double bonus of both making media contamination by other organisms unlikely and ensuring that Halobacterium is less likely to grow elsewhere.
Posted by Reshma Shetty