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Synthetic Cells: From Simple Bio‐Inspired Modules to Sophisticated Integrated Systems

Camila Guindani, Lucas Caire da Silva, Shoupeng Cao, Tsvetomir Ivanov, Katharina Landfester

2021Angewandte Chemie International Edition202 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bottom-up synthetic biology is the science of building systems that mimic the structure and function of living cells from scratch. To do this, researchers combine tools from chemistry, materials science, and biochemistry to develop functional and structural building blocks to construct synthetic cell-like systems. The many strategies and materials that have been developed in recent decades have enabled scientists to engineer synthetic cells and organelles that mimic the essential functions and behaviors of natural cells. Examples include synthetic cells that can synthesize their own ATP using light, maintain metabolic reactions through enzymatic networks, perform gene replication, and even grow and divide. In this Review, we discuss recent developments in the design and construction of synthetic cells and organelles using the bottom-up approach. Our goal is to present representative synthetic cells of increasing complexity as well as strategies for solving distinct challenges in bottom-up synthetic biology.

Topics & Concepts

Synthetic biologyArtificial cellFunction (biology)Construct (python library)Computer scienceOrganelleNanotechnologyComputational biologyData scienceBiochemical engineeringBiologyEngineeringCell biologyMaterials scienceBiochemistryProgramming languageMembraneSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchSupramolecular Chemistry and Complexes
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