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Multimodal Microorganism Development: Integrating Top-Down Biological Engineering with Bottom-Up Rational Design

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Biological engineering has unprecedented potential to solve society's most pressing challenges. Engineering approaches must consider complex technical, economic, and social factors. This requires methods that confer gene/pathway-level functionality and organism-level robustness in rapid and cost-effective ways. This article compares foundational engineering approaches - bottom-up, gene-targeted engineering, and top-down, whole-genome engineering - and identifies significant complementarity between them. Cases drawn from engineering Saccharomyces cerevisiae exemplify the synergy of a combined approach. Indeed, multimodal engineering streamlines strain development by leveraging the complementarity of whole-genome and gene-targeted engineering to overcome the gap in design knowledge that restricts rational design. As biological engineers target more complex systems, this dual-track approach is poised to become an increasingly important tool to realize the promise of synthetic biology.
Journal: Trends in biotechnology
ISSN: 0167-7799
Issue: 3
Volume: 38
Pages: 241 - 253
Publication year:2020
BOF-keylabel:yes
IOF-keylabel:yes
BOF-publication weight:10
CSS-citation score:1
Authors:International
Authors from:Government, Higher Education
Accessibility:Closed