Litcius/Paper detail

The Expanded Central Dogma: Genome Resynthesis, Orthogonal Biosystems, Synthetic Genetics

Karola Gerecht, Niklas Freund, Wei Liu, Yang Liu, Maximilian J. L. J. Fürst, Philipp Holliger

2023Annual Review of Biophysics23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Synthetic biology seeks to probe fundamental aspects of biological form and function by construction [i.e., (re)synthesis] rather than deconstruction (analysis). In this sense, biological sciences now follow the lead given by the chemical sciences. Synthesis can complement analytic studies but also allows novel approaches to answering fundamental biological questions and opens up vast opportunities for the exploitation of biological processes to provide solutions for global problems. In this review, we explore aspects of this synthesis paradigm as applied to the chemistry and function of nucleic acids in biological systems and beyond, specifically, in genome resynthesis, synthetic genetics (i.e., the expansion of the genetic alphabet, of the genetic code, and of the chemical make-up of genetic systems), and the elaboration of orthogonal biosystems and components.

Topics & Concepts

Synthetic biologyComputational biologyGenetic codeFunction (biology)BiologyGenomeComplement (music)GeneticsDNAGenePhenotypeComplementationRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyDNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry