Engineering the Interface Between Cellular Chassis and Integrated Biological Systems
Author(s)
Canton, Bartholomew
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The engineering of biological systems with predictable behavior is a challenging problem. One reason for this difficulty is that engineered biological systems are embedded within complex and variable host cells. To help enable the future engineering
of biological systems, I will study and optimize the interface between an engineered
biological system and its host cell or “chassis”. Other engineering disciplines use modularity to make interacting systems interchangeable and to insulate one system from another. Engineered biological systems are more likely to work as predicted if system function is decoupled from the state of the host cell. Also, specifying and standardizing the interfaces between a system and the chassis will allow systems to be engineered independent of chassis and allow systems to be interchanged between different chassis. To this end, I will build dedicated transcription and translation systems, independent from the equivalent host cell systems. In parallel, I will develop test systems and metrics to measure the interactions between an engineered system and its chassis. Lastly, I will explore methods to “port” a simple engineered system from a prokaryotic to a eukaryotic organism so that the system can function in both organisms.
Date issued
2005-08-08Series/Report no.
Thesis Proposals1
Keywords
Cellular Chassis, Engineered Biological Systems
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