Designing Biological Circuits: Synthetic Biology Within the Operon Model and Beyond
Author(s)
English, Max A.; Gayet, Raphaël V.; Collins, James J.
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In 1961, Jacob and Monod proposed the operon model of gene regulation. At the model's core was the modular assembly of regulators, operators, and structural genes. To illustrate the composability of these elements, Jacob and Monod linked phenotypic diversity to the architectures of regulatory circuits. In this review, we examine how the circuit blueprints imagined by Jacob and Monod laid the foundation for the first synthetic gene networks that launched the field of synthetic biology in 2000. We discuss the influences of the operon model and its broader theoretical framework on the first generation of synthetic biological circuits, which were predominantly transcriptional and posttranscriptional circuits. We also describe how recent advances in molecular biology beyond the operon model—namely, programmable DNA- and RNA-binding molecules as well as models of epigenetic and posttranslational regulation—are expanding the synthetic biology toolkit and enabling the design of more complex biological circuits.
Date issued
2021-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Institute for Medical Engineering & ScienceJournal
Annual Review of Biochemistry
Publisher
Annual Reviews
Citation
English, Max A. et al. "Designing Biological Circuits: Synthetic Biology Within the Operon Model and Beyond." Annual Review of Biochemistry 90, 1 (June 2021): 221-244.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0066-4154
1545-4509