🧬Systems Biology Unit 14 – Synthetic Biology: Circuit Design Basics
Synthetic biology merges biology, engineering, and computer science to design new biological systems. It aims to create novel parts, devices, and organisms with desired traits, drawing inspiration from electrical engineering to design biological circuits and programs.
Key players in synthetic biology are genes, proteins, and circuits. Genes encode instructions for proteins, which perform various tasks. Genetic circuits are networks of interacting genes and proteins that function like electronic circuits, responding to inputs and producing outputs.
Synthetic biology combines principles from biology, engineering, and computer science to design and construct new biological systems and functions
Aims to create novel biological parts, devices, and systems that do not exist in the natural world
Utilizes the power of genetic engineering and molecular biology techniques to modify or create organisms with desired traits
Draws inspiration from electrical engineering and computer science to design biological circuits and programs
Potential applications span various fields including medicine (drug development, gene therapy), agriculture (crop improvement), environmental remediation, and biomanufacturing (production of chemicals, materials)
Raises ethical and safety concerns regarding the creation of artificial life forms and the potential unintended consequences of releasing engineered organisms into the environment
Requires interdisciplinary collaboration among biologists, engineers, computer scientists, and other experts to tackle complex challenges
Key Players: Genes, Proteins, and Circuits
Genes are the fundamental units of heredity that encode instructions for making proteins
Composed of DNA sequences that specify the amino acid sequence of proteins
Can be manipulated through genetic engineering techniques (gene insertion, deletion, modification)
Proteins are the functional molecules that carry out various tasks in living organisms
Serve as enzymes catalyzing biochemical reactions, structural components, signaling molecules, and regulators of gene expression
Protein function is determined by its amino acid sequence and three-dimensional structure
Genetic circuits are networks of interacting genes and proteins that perform specific functions
Analogous to electronic circuits where genes and proteins act as switches, sensors, and actuators
Can be designed to respond to specific inputs (small molecules, light) and produce desired outputs (fluorescent proteins, metabolites)
Understanding the interplay between genes, proteins, and circuits is crucial for designing functional biological systems
Synthetic biologists aim to create standardized, modular, and predictable genetic parts and circuits that can be easily assembled and optimized
Building Blocks of Genetic Circuits
Promoters are DNA sequences that initiate transcription of genes
Serve as binding sites for RNA polymerase and transcription factors
Can be constitutive (always active) or inducible (activated by specific signals)
Ribosome binding sites (RBS) are RNA sequences that recruit ribosomes for translation of mRNA into proteins
Determine the efficiency of protein synthesis
Coding sequences (CDS) are DNA sequences that encode the amino acid sequence of proteins
Can be optimized for expression in different host organisms (codon optimization)
Terminators are DNA sequences that signal the end of transcription
Prevent read-through into adjacent genes
Operators are DNA sequences that bind transcription factors to regulate gene expression
Can be activating (enhancing transcription) or repressing (blocking transcription)
These building blocks can be combined in various ways to create complex genetic circuits with desired functions
Promoters and RBS can be used to control the strength and timing of gene expression
CDS can be swapped to produce different proteins with specific functions
Operators can be used to create feedback loops and regulatory networks
Logic Gates in Biology: AND, OR, NOT
Logic gates are fundamental building blocks of electronic circuits that perform Boolean logic operations
Synthetic biologists have created analogous genetic logic gates using genes and proteins
AND gate: Output is produced only when all inputs are present
Can be implemented using a promoter that requires multiple transcription factors to bind for activation
OR gate: Output is produced when at least one input is present
Can be implemented using multiple promoters that independently drive expression of the same output gene
NOT gate: Output is produced only when the input is absent
Can be implemented using a repressor protein that blocks transcription in the presence of an input signal
Combining these basic logic gates allows the creation of more complex circuits (XOR, NAND, NOR)
Genetic logic gates can be used to process multiple inputs and make decisions based on environmental conditions
Example: A circuit that produces a therapeutic protein only in the presence of two disease biomarkers
Designing Your First Genetic Circuit
Define the desired function and inputs/outputs of the circuit
What task should the circuit perform? What signals will it respond to and what will it produce?
Select appropriate genetic parts (promoters, RBS, CDS, terminators) based on the design requirements
Consider factors such as host organism, expression levels, and compatibility between parts
Assemble the parts into a complete circuit using DNA assembly methods (restriction enzymes, Gibson assembly, Golden Gate assembly)
Ensure proper orientation and spacing of genetic elements
Introduce the circuit into a suitable host organism (bacteria, yeast, mammalian cells) for testing
Use plasmid vectors or genomic integration methods
Characterize the performance of the circuit using various assays (fluorescence, enzymatic activity, metabolite production)
Measure input-output relationships, dynamic behavior, and robustness
Optimize the circuit based on the characterization data
Fine-tune expression levels, replace underperforming parts, and introduce additional regulation
Validate the functionality of the optimized circuit in the intended application context
Test in more complex environments (co-cultures, animal models) and assess safety and biocontainment
Tools and Techniques for Circuit Assembly
Restriction enzymes are used to cut DNA at specific recognition sites
Allows the creation of compatible sticky ends for ligation of parts
Gibson assembly is a method for assembling multiple DNA fragments in a single reaction
Uses overlapping sequences and a combination of enzymes (exonuclease, DNA polymerase, DNA ligase)
Golden Gate assembly is a method for assembling multiple parts using type IIS restriction enzymes
Enables scarless assembly and standardized modular cloning
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is used to amplify specific DNA sequences
Allows the introduction of modifications (mutations, restriction sites) and the creation of fusion proteins
DNA synthesis is used to chemically synthesize oligonucleotides and longer DNA fragments
Enables the creation of novel sequences and codon optimization
Genome editing tools (CRISPR-Cas9, TALENs, zinc finger nucleases) are used to make targeted modifications to genomes
Allows the integration of circuits into specific genomic loci and the creation of knockout strains
Bioinformatics tools (sequence analysis, modeling, circuit design software) are used to aid in the design and optimization of genetic circuits
Biological complexity and context-dependence can make circuit behavior unpredictable
Genetic background, metabolic state, and environmental factors can influence circuit performance
Incomplete understanding of biological systems can lead to unexpected interactions and off-target effects
Unintended cross-talk between circuit components and host pathways can disrupt function
Evolutionary instability can cause circuits to mutate and lose function over time
Selection pressures can favor the inactivation of burdensome or toxic circuit elements
Insufficient characterization and standardization of genetic parts can hinder reproducibility and scalability
Variability in part performance across different contexts can make circuit design challenging
Limited host range and compatibility issues can restrict the applications of genetic circuits
Some circuits may not function properly in industrially relevant organisms or complex environments
Addressing these challenges requires a combination of improved biological understanding, robust design principles, and rigorous testing and validation
Iterative design-build-test cycles and the incorporation of feedback control can help mitigate some of these issues
Real-World Applications and Future Directions
Metabolic engineering: Genetic circuits can be used to optimize the production of valuable compounds (drugs, fuels, materials) in microorganisms
Example: Engineered yeast strains that produce high levels of artemisinic acid, a precursor to the antimalarial drug artemisinin
Biosensing and diagnostics: Genetic circuits can be designed to detect specific molecules or conditions and produce a measurable output
Example: A paper-based synthetic gene network that detects Ebola virus RNA and produces a color change
Bioremediation: Engineered microbes with genetic circuits can be used to degrade pollutants or sequester heavy metals from the environment
Example: Bacteria engineered to sense and degrade oil spills in marine environments
Therapeutics: Genetic circuits can be used to create smart therapeutics that sense disease states and deliver targeted treatments
Example: Engineered immune cells (CAR-T cells) that recognize and kill cancer cells
Agriculture: Genetic circuits can be used to create crops with improved traits (resistance to pests, drought tolerance) or to control plant growth and development
Example: A synthetic genetic circuit that regulates the timing of flowering in plants
Future directions in synthetic biology include the development of more complex and sophisticated circuits, the integration of multiple circuits into larger systems, and the exploration of novel applications in areas such as materials science, data storage, and artificial life
The field will continue to benefit from advances in DNA synthesis, genome editing, and computational tools for circuit design and modeling