Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

‘Can simple biological systems be built from standardized interchangeable parts?’ Negotiating biology and engineering in a synthetic biology competition

36

Citations

25

References

2013

Year

TLDR

Synthetic biology seeks to apply engineering principles to biology, yet the differing epistemologies and objectives of the two disciplines create ongoing debate and tension as the field develops. The study examines how engineering and biology negotiate their roles within the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition. By analyzing iGEM—a bootstrapping undergraduate contest that tests engineering approaches—the authors investigate the negotiation dynamics between engineering and biology. The study finds that iGEM teams confront complex negotiations over standardization, design, intellectual property, and social imagination, revealing a nascent moral economy that reshapes epistemic and institutional values in synthetic biology.

Abstract

Synthetic biology represents a recent attempt to bring engineering principles and practices to working with biology. In practice, the nature of the relationship between engineering and biology in synthetic biology is a subject of ongoing debate. The disciplines of biology and engineering are typically seen to involve different ways of knowing and doing, and to embody different assumptions and objectives. Tensions between these approaches are playing out as the field of synthetic biology is being established. Here, we study negotiations between engineering and biology through the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition. This undergraduate competition has been important in launching and bootstrapping the field of synthetic biology, and serves as a test-bed for the engineering approach. We show how a number of issues that iGEM teams must grapple with – including standardization, design, intellectual property, and the imagination of the social – involve the negotiation of engineering, biology, and other disciplines (including computer science), in ways more complex than the engineering rhetoric of synthetic biology implies. We suggest that a new moral economy for synthetic biology is being created, in which epistemic and institutional values, conventions, and practices are being negotiated and (re)defined.

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