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Synthetic Developmental Biology: Understanding Through Reconstitution

Gavin Schlissel, Pulin Li

2020Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Reconstitution is an experimental strategy that seeks to recapitulate biological events outside their natural contexts using a reduced set of components. Classically, biochemical reconstitution has been extensively applied to identify the minimal set of molecules sufficient for recreating the basic chemistry of life. By analogy, reconstitution approaches to developmental biology recapitulate aspects of developmental events outside an embryo, with the goal of revealing the basic genetic circuits or physical cues sufficient for recreating developmental decisions. The rapidly growing repertoire of genetic, molecular, microscopic, and bioengineering tools is expanding the complexity and precision of reconstitution experiments. We review the emerging field of synthetic developmental biology, with a focus on the ways in which reconstitution strategies and new biological tools have enhanced our modern understanding of fundamental questions in developmental biology.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyDevelopmental biologySynthetic biologyRepertoireAnalogyCognitive scienceSet (abstract data type)Evolutionary biologyBasic researchComputational biologyGeneticsEpistemologyComputer sciencePsychologyLibrary sciencePhilosophyAcousticsPhysicsProgramming languagePluripotent Stem Cells ResearchCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringAnimal Genetics and Reproduction
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