SIB has developed a number of fun ways to discover bioinformatics and the key role it plays in health and society today: workshops, mobile games, classroom activities and even comic strips! A special focus is given to young people and girls in particular, to foster their interest in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).

Interactive educational platforms and workshops

Over the years, the institute has developed many interactive websites and workshops for the public, on a range of bioinformatics topics. They are available for teachers, students as well as the layman, and invite participants to discover authentic scientific research practice in a playful way. Here are some of them:

In the light of evolution

What do we, humans, have in common with the banana? what does the evolution of coronaviruses tell us about the pandemic? Discover stories showing some of the real-life implications of the somewhat abstract concept of evolutionary biology with the In the light of evolution website (EN, FR), laureate of the 2021 Optimus Agora prize. As featured on Heidi.news.

ChromosomeWalk

Discover the world of DNA, genes, proteins, popular genetic variations and bioinformatics tools which are used to visualize genomic data. Discover also the concept of ‘virtual’ portrait based on an individual’s DNA. Visit the ChromosomeWalk website (EN, DE, FR).

Precisionmed

Discover how precision medicine draws on cutting-edge technologies to identify therapeutic strategies specifically tailored to a patient’s history and genetic data with our Precision medicine website (EN, FR).

All other workshops

Discover a few of the major bioinformatics tools that are used to study insulin and genetic diseases. Visit the website (EN, FR) 

Find out how bioinformatics helped understand the coronavirus and its proteins, and the importance of having data quickly and freely available. Visit the website (EN, FR)

Discover how bioinformatics tools can be used to identify the different species (animal, plant, bacteria) present in a pizza, based on the DNA which is found in it. Visit the website (FR)

Acquire a simple yet realistic picture of how bioinformatics is used to design a drug today. The examples given are candidate drugs for the treatment of cancer and pain. Design your own drug, perhaps even with therapeutic properties that are better than those of existing drugs! Visit the DrugDesign website (EN, FR).

A selection of bioinformatics activities and educational material such as ‘Philophylo’, ‘Phylogeny and Biodiversity’ and ‘BLAST discovery’. Visit the website (FR).

A video game to explore our genome

Launched on the occasion of SIB’s 20th anniversary, Genome Jumper is an educational mobile game inviting you to explore the human genome and its variations. From skin and eye color to food preference or disease predisposition - countless features (phenotypes) can be influenced by small changes (variants) in our DNA. Play the game to discover the effects of such changes on your avatar...

Read more and download it here (EN, DE, FR)

 

Comic strips to share tales of proteins

Where do proteins come from? How are they made? What do they do? Protein Spotlight is an electronic magazine by SIB’s Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen which introduces the tremendously varied world of proteins. From 2020 to 2022, 21 comics invite you to revisit the most popular Protein Spotlight stories and are illustrated by Aloys Lolo. 

Read the comics 

Read the latest Protein Spotlight 

Read the latest book "Life, love, death & proteins" (in FR)

And more, such as books and plays

 

  • Article: Using bioinformatics to hunt SARS-CoV-2, its variants & its origins – a practical guide. Marie-Claude Blatter, Philippe Le Mercier, Teresa K. Attwood, The GOBLET Foundation. F1000 Research 08/21. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7490/f1000research.1118746.1
  • Article: Introducing computer-aided drug design – a practical guide. Teresa K. Attwood, Marie-Claude Blatter, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, Antione Daina, Vincent Zoete, The GOBLET Foundation. F1000Research 12/2020. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7490/f1000research.1118400.1
  • Article: Using Bioinformatics to Understand Genetic Diseases. Marie-Claude Blatter, Patricia Palagi, Teresa Attwood and the GOBLET foundation. F1000 Research 03/2019. DOI: https://doi.org/10.7490/f1000research.1116468.1
  • Article: Educational Tools to Introduce Computer-Aided Drug Design to Students and to the Public at Large, Antoine Daina, Marie-Claude Blatter, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, and Vincent Zoete. Chimia (Aarau), 2018, 72 (1), 55-61.
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29490794
  • Article: Drug Design Workshop: A Web-Based Educational Tool To Introduce Computer-Aided Drug Design to the General Public. Antoine Daina, Marie-Claude Blatter, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, Patricia M. Palagi, Diana Marek, Ioannis Xenarios, Torsten Schwede, Olivier Michielin, and Vincent Zoete. J. Chem. Educ. 02/2017; 94 (3). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.6b00596.
  • Article: The Metagenomic Pizza: a simple recipe to introduce bioinformatics to the layman. Marie-Claude Blatter, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, Patricia M. Palagi, Lydie Bougueleret, Ioannis Xenarios. EMBnet.journal. 04/2016. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14806/ej.22.0.864
  • Conference poster: ChromosomeWalk, a virtual exhibition introducing the human genome and bioinformatics (ISMB 2013)
    Marie-Claude Blatter, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, Patricia Palagi, Lydie Bougueleret, Frédérique Lisacek, Marc Robinson-Rechavi, Ioannis Xenarios.
    https://f1000research.com/posters/1098206
  • Conference poster: Drug design for high school students, high school teachers and the public at large (Basel Computational Biology Conference 2015). Marie-Claude Blatter, Antoine Daina, Vincent Zoete, Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen, Diana Marek, Patricia Palagi, Loannis Xenarios, Torsten Schwede, Olivier Michielin.
    https://f1000research.com/posters/1098206

Do not miss any upcoming outreach event and stay up to date with our latest activities for the public.

Want to organize workshops for your school or your company? Or to get the Chromosome 21 book including its complete DNA sequence?

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