A Synthetic Post-transcriptional
Controller To Explore the Modular Design of Gene Circuits
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Abstract
The assembly from modular parts is an efficient approach
for creating new devices in Synthetic Biology. In the “bottom-up”
designing strategy, modular parts are characterized in advance, and
then mathematical modeling is used to predict the outcome of the final
device. A prerequisite for bottom-up design is that the biological
parts behave in a modular way when assembled together. We designed
a new synthetic device for post-transcriptional regulation of gene
expression and tested if the outcome of the device could be described
from the features of its components. Modular parts showed unpredictable
behavior when assembled in different complex circuits. This prevented
a modular description of the device that was possible only under specific
conditions. Our findings shed doubts into the feasibility of a pure
bottom-up approach in synthetic biology, highlighting the urgency
for new strategies for the rational design of synthetic devices