From noise to synthetic nucleoli: can synthetic biology achieve new insights?
File(s)47 accepted version C5IB00271K.pdf (1.62 MB)
Accepted version
Author(s)
Ciechonska, M
Grob, A
Isalan, M
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Synthetic biology aims to re-organise and control biological components to make functional devices. Along the way, the iterative process of designing and testing gene circuits has the potential to yield many insights into the functioning of the underlying chassis of cells. Thus, synthetic biology is converging with disciplines such as systems biology and even classical cell biology, to give a new level of predictability to gene expression, cell metabolism and cellular signalling networks. This review gives an overview of the contributions that synthetic biology has made in understanding gene expression, in terms of cell heterogeneity (noise), the coupling of growth and energy usage to expression, and spatiotemporal considerations. We mainly compare progress in bacterial and mammalian systems, which have some of the most-developed engineering frameworks. Overall, one view of synthetic biology can be neatly summarised as “creating in order to understand.”
Date Issued
2016-01-04
Date Acceptance
2015-12-27
Citation
Integrative Biology, 2016, 8 (4), pp.383-393
ISSN
1757-9708
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Start Page
383
End Page
393
Journal / Book Title
Integrative Biology
Volume
8
Issue
4
Copyright Statement
© The Author(s) 2016.
Sponsor
Wellcome Trust
Wellcome Trust
Grant Number
102944/Z/13/Z
102944/B/13/Z
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Cell Biology
PROTEIN-PROTEIN INTERACTIONS
GENE-EXPRESSION
MAMMALIAN-CELLS
ESCHERICHIA-COLI
SINGLE-CELL
SPATIOTEMPORAL CONTROL
TRANSCRIPTION CONTROL
REPRESSOR SYSTEM
LOGIC GATES
GROWTH-RATE
General Science & Technology
Publication Status
Published