Bioinformatics Advance Access originally published online on September 5, 2006
Bioinformatics 2006 22(22):2790-2799; doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btl469
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Synthetic biologyputting engineering into biology

1 ETH Zurich, Bioprocess Laboratory, Institute of Process Engineering Universitätsstrasse 6, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
*To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Synthetic biology is interpreted as the engineering-driven building of increasingly complex biological entities for novel applications. Encouraged by progress in the design of artificial gene networks, de novo DNA synthesis and protein engineering, we review the case for this emerging discipline. Key aspects of an engineering approach are purpose-orientation, deep insight into the underlying scientific principles, a hierarchy of abstraction including suitable interfaces between and within the levels of the hierarchy, standardization and the separation of design and fabrication. Synthetic biology investigates possibilities to implement these requirements into the process of engineering biological systems. This is illustrated on the DNA level by the implementation of engineering-inspired artificial operations such as toggle switching, oscillating or production of spatial patterns. On the protein level, the functionally self-contained domain structure of a number of proteins suggests possibilities for essentially Lego-like recombination which can be exploited for reprogramming DNA binding domain specificities or signaling pathways. Alternatively, computational design emerges to rationally reprogram enzyme function. Finally, the increasing facility of de novo DNA synthesissynthetic biology's system fabrication processsupplies the possibility to implement novel designs for ever more complex systems. Some of these elements have merged to realize the first tangible synthetic biology applications in the area of manufacturing of pharmaceutical compounds.
Contact: panke{at}ipe.mavt.ethz.ch
Received on April 23, 2006; revised on August 29, 2006; accepted on August 29, 2006
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