

At the start of the competition all teams are given a tool kit of interchangable parts for their project, so called "Biobricks". These parts consist of promoters, terminators, plasmid backbones etc., and at the end of the summer the teams add their new BioBricks creations to the iGEM Parts Registry, and so the scientific community can build upon this added number of BioBricks sets in the next year.
At the end of the competition, all teams meet in Boston for a scientific conference where the projects are presented to one another and to a scientific jury. The judges then award medals and special prizes in different categories to the teams, and then select a ‘Grand Prize Winner’ team as well as ‘Runner-Up’ teams.
The iGEM competition was first held in 2004 with 31 teams participating, and at that point it was mainly aimed at undergraduate university students. But since then the competition has grown largely in size with ~300 teams competing in both High School, Undergraduate and Overgraduate divisions.
The iGEM Uppsala team is an overgraduate team competing for Uppsala University in Sweden. The Uppsala team has participated in iGEM since 2009 and have throughout the years created many interesting and practical biological systems. For example they have engineered bacteria to express different visible colors, to catalyze the formation of certain nutrients, worked with the problem with antibiotic resistance and with the novel technologies CRISPR and microfluidics.

And so as a solution to these problems, the official Uppsala iGEM association collaborated with a team of graduate students at Uppsala University to create the Upstrain database, which served as a project for the grad students during the course Information Management Systems. The aim of this project course was to create a data storage and management system (LIMS system) that could perform a certain set of tasks. The system needed to be able to perform database operations such as without any information loss, as well as incorporate security checks to protect the data from malignant outside attacks.
The basic functionality of the database is relatively straightforward and has a simple user interface, which hopefully will be incorporated into the daily use of future iGEM teams at Uppsala university as an efficient and convenient solution for data managment.