Synthetic biology of multicellular systems: new platforms and applications for animal cells and organisms.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Like life itself, synthetic biology began with unicellular
organisms. Early synthetic biologists built genetic circuits
in model prokaryotes and yeast because of their relative
biological simplicity and ease of genetic manipulation. With
superior genetic tools, faster generation times, and betterunderstood endogenous gene expression machinery, prokaryotes and yeast were (and remain) appealing hosts for the engineering of synthetic systems. Now in its second decade, synthetic biology in unicellular organisms has produced myriad synthetic genetic circuits, a number of industrial applications, and fundamental new biological insights unlikely to have emerged from nonsynthetic approaches.
[1] Lorian Schaeffer,et al. A synthetic maternal-effect selfish genetic element drives population replacement in Drosophila. , 2007, Science.
[2] G. Barnea,et al. The genetic design of signaling cascades to record receptor activation , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.