Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published April 2016 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Using synthetic biology to make cells tomorrow's test tubes

Abstract

The main tenet of physical biology is that biological phenomena can be subject to the same quantitative and predictive understanding that physics has afforded in the context of inanimate matter. However, the inherent complexity of many of these biological processes often leads to the derivation of complex theoretical descriptions containing a plethora of unknown parameters. Such complex descriptions pose a conceptual challenge to the establishment of a solid basis for predictive biology. In this article, we present various exciting examples of how synthetic biology can be used to simplify biological systems and distill these phenomena down to their essential features as a means to enable their theoretical description. Here, synthetic biology goes beyond previous efforts to engineer nature and becomes a tool to bend nature to understand it. We discuss various recent and classic experiments featuring applications of this synthetic approach to the elucidation of problems ranging from bacteriophage infection, to transcriptional regulation in bacteria and in developing embryos, to evolution. In all of these examples, synthetic biology provides the opportunity to turn cells into the equivalent of a test tube, where biological phenomena can be reconstituted and our theoretical understanding put to test with the same ease that these same phenomena can be studied in the in vitro setting.

Additional Information

© 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry. Received 11 Jan 2016, Accepted 22 Feb 2016, First published online 08 Mar 2016. This article is part of themed collection: Biological Insights from Synthetic Biology. The authors are deeply grateful for support provided by La Fondation Pierre Gilles de Gennes (RP), NIH through the Directors Pioneer Award DP1 OD000217 (RP) and R01 GM085286 (RP and RCB), the Burroughs Wellcome Fund through their Career Award at the Scientific Interface (HG), and the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at UC Santa Barbara through the National Science Foundation Grant No. NSF PHY11-25915 and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation award No. 2919.

Attached Files

Accepted Version - nihms767211.pdf

Files

nihms767211.pdf
Files (1.2 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:f8d4e46ea5dc3145744e0f0f40461873
1.2 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023