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Microbial interventions are an easier alternative to engineer higher organisms
Authors:F. Dean Keck  Karen M. Polizzi
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ UK

Imperial College Centre for Synthetic Biology, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ UK;2. Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ UK

Abstract:Advances in synthetic biology have made microbes easier to engineer than ever before. However, synthetic biology in animals and plants has lagged behind. Since it is now known that the phenotype of higher organisms depends largely on their microbiota, we propose that this is an easier route to achieving synthetic biology applications in these organisms.

A transition from reading to writing biology has blurred the lines between basic science and engineering creating the field of synthetic biology. With an ever‐expanding genetic toolbox, we now manipulate natural biological systems to optimize our anthropocentric activities. From the synthesis of complex aromatic compounds, to the production of safer vaccines, a problem identified may find its solution lying in the metabolism of a single cell. Initially, synthetic biology was largely focused on the production of such commodities at the industrial scale, not only to maximize profitability, but also to minimize energy and resource consumption. Consequently, this paradigm shift has come to alter the notion of a factory by many orders of magnitude and to create a new bridge between the built and natural world, as we employ nature’s evolutionary machinery to address our modern endeavours.Growth of the genetic toolbox and maturation of synthetic biology as a field has led to speculation about increasingly ambitious applications of writing biology with implications beyond biosynthesis. To date, most applications have been developed using microbes because they are less complex, more well understood and easier to manipulate. Single‐celled organisms can be optimized for production of complicated organic molecules; however, other exploits of genetic engineering will target more ambitious feats and thus require engineering of more than a large monoculture of microbes. Applications of synthetic biology outside of the bioreactor can address such issues as health and longevity, challenges in industrial agriculture and farming, the degradation of natural habitats and the reclamation of limited natural resources.Scope and scale of these applications provide obvious obstacles to the development of effective biotechnologies, but a more immediate limitation to realizing these technologies is the relative lack of genetic tools and insights which would allow the tinkering and rewiring of more complex organisms such as animals and plants. However, because of the natural intimate interactions between higher eukaryotes and microbes and the effect of these on phenotype, it is our vision that a faster, more tractable route to the engineering animal and plant phenotypes is via engineering their microbiomes.
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