Applying engineering principles to the design and construction of transcriptional devices
Author(s)
Shetty, Reshma P
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The aim of this thesis is to consider how fundamental engineering principles might best be applied to the design and construction of engineered biological systems. I begin by applying these principles to a key application area of synthetic biology: metabolic engineering. Abstraction is used to compile a desired system function, reprogramming bacterial odor, to devices with human-defined function, then to biological parts, and finally to genetic sequences. Standardization is used to make the process of engineering a multi-component system easier. I then focus on devices that implement digital information processing through transcriptional regulation in Escherichia coli. For simplicity, I limit the discussion to a particular type of device, a trancriptional inverter, although much of the work applies to other devices as well. First, I discuss basic issues in transcriptional inverter design. Identification of key metrics for evaluating the quality of a static device behavior allows informed device design that optimizes digital performance. Second, I address the issue of ensuring that transcriptional devices work in combination by presenting a framework for developing standards for functional composition. The framework relies on additional measures of device performance, such as error rate and the operational demand the device places on the cellular chassis, in order to proscribe standard device signal thresholds. Third, I develop an experimental, proof-of-principle implementation of a transcriptional inverter based on a synthetic transcription factor derived from a zinc finger DNA binding domain and a leucine zipper dimerization domain. Zinc fingers and leucine zippers offer a potential scalable solution to the challenge of building libraries of transcription-based logic devices for arbitrary information processing in cells. Finally, I extend the principle of physical composition standards from parts and devices to the vectors that propagate those parts and devices. The new vectors support the assembly of biological systems. Taken together, the work helps to advance the transformation of biological system design from an ad hoc, artisanal craft to a more predictable, engineering discipline.
Description
Ph.D. thesis (user submitted)
Date issued
2008-05-27Keywords
synthetic biology, biological engineering, transcriptional logic, transcription-based logic, engineered biological systems, PoPS, BioBrick standard biological part, abstraction, standardization
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