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Published online before print
December 6, 2006, 10.1101/gr.5776007 Genome Res. 17:1-6, 2007 ©2007 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/07 $5.00
Review Synthetic biology projects in vitro1 Department of Pharmacology and Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA; 2 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
Advances in the in vitro synthesis and evolution of DNA, RNA, and polypeptides are accelerating the construction of biopolymers, pathways, and organisms with novel functions. Known functions are being integrated and debugged with the aim of synthesizing life-like systems. The goals are knowledge, tools, smart materials, and therapies.
The basic elements of chemistry and biology are few, but the synthetic combinations are unlimited and awe inspiring. The first international conference on synthetic biology charted its goals as understanding and utilizing lifes diverse solutions to process information, materials, and energy (Silver and Way 2004
In vivo SBPs mostly involve bacterial engineering, have diverse goals, and are generally more suited than in vitro SBPs for large-scale production/conversion of materials. Neobiotic constructions with new functions now encompass redesigned metabolic pathways for pollution remediation (Pieper and Reineke 2000
In contrast to in vitro SBPs, some in vivo SBPs require strict safety regulations. The synthesis of poliovirus (Cello et al. 2002
Several groups have proposed to create bacteria with chromosomes synthesized entirely from synthetic oligos. This might be done stepwise (Posfai et al. 2006
Time and again, decreasing the dependence on cells has increased engineering flexibility with biopolymers and self-copying systems. For example, evolution has been engineered in vitro using very alien designs that accelerate selection of almost any imaginable molecular function (Brody and Gold 2000 Progress in synthesizing biopolymers and replicating systems with decreasing dependence on cells will now be discussed in detail. Such a "synthesis" of current in vitro SBPs showcases many exciting achievements and goals. It also reveals steps for generalization and integration of methods (e.g., adaptation to physiological conditions) that may ultimately allow cell-free self-replication from small molecule substrates.
The fundamental tool of synthetic biology is undoubtedly gene synthesis. Gene syntheses by recombinant DNA cloning and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) are now being rivaled by tour-de-force raw synthesis from oligos. Established polymerase and ligation methods have enabled synthesis of a 7.5-kb virus (Cello et al. 2002
Cell-free assembly and replication of large DNA structures is challenging, but rewarding. PCR is broadly used, but error-prone, confined to products <40 kb, and difficult to integrate with temperature-sensitive biological reactions. More physiological and accurate is strand-displacement amplification of circular DNA into concatameric DNAs using a restriction enzyme and DNA ligase to regenerate monomeric circles (Dahl et al. 2004
Though DNA is purposely nonreactive in life, synthetic biologists have different ideas: They use in vitro-directed evolution of DNA to evolve efficient and useful DNA catalysts (Santoro and Joyce 1997
In contrast to methods for synthesizing other biopolymers, RNA is usually synthesized without cells or cell extracts. Typically, research needs can be met by run-off transcription of synthetic oligos, PCR products, or linearized plasmids using coliphage T7 RNA polymerase, but there are limitations. Inflexibility of the 5'-terminal first few nucleotides and heterogeneity of the 3' terminus can be addressed for very short RNAs by chemical synthesis. Alternatively, these restrictions and the need for one linear template per RNA might be overcome in a generalizable manner by using short class II T7 terminators (Lyakhov et al. 1998
In vitro selection and evolution of RNAs has been more useful for isolating new ligands and catalysts than might have been expected from libraries limited to anionic polymers containing only four different, somewhat inert nucleotides. Its success testifies to the solubility, stability, and conformational diversity of three-dimensional RNA structures and the power of readily screening up to 1015 molecules. Cell-free replication and evolution was first achieved using coliphage Q
Proteins are generally too long for chemical synthesis and are prepared almost exclusively in vivo due to optimal post-translational folding, modification, and yield. Nevertheless, toxicity, solubility, and purification issues encourage improvement of in vitro translation systems. The latter are also more versatile for incorporation of amino acid analogs: More than 100 have been incorporated at a single suppression site per protein (even carbohydrate linkages) (Cornish et al. 1995
For directed evolution of a peptide or protein, it must be linked to its mRNA either directly (ribosome display [Mattheakis et al. 1994
The directed evolution of small molecule ligands would be a bonanza for target validation and drug discovery, but is a substantially more complicated goal than directed evolution of nucleic acids and polypeptides. Though cellular and multicellular organisms have been evolving small molecule drugs for eons, this process is prohibitively slow. Now, a radically different in vitro approach called "DNA display" (Halpin and Harbury 2004
Membrane encapsulation has the advantages of allowing system evolution without serial transfers, purifications, or splitting, and extension of replicating systems to new environments. Remarkably, synthesis and replication of compartments does not require any macromolecular catalysts: Aqueous solutions of pure lipids can yield spontaneously dividing membrane vesicles that allow passage of small molecules while retaining macromolecules (Szostak et al. 2001
What is life? Living systems display inheritance, adaptation, growth, and repair by exchanging components with, and responding to, their environment. Replication and evolution are a requirement at the level of the population, not the individual. Even dead organisms can be recognized as once living by virtue of replicated complexity (replexity) not found in systems with merely high complexity. Replexity and other quantitative metrics (e.g., fidelity, evolvability) may help SBPs and alter our concept of life. For example, life-as-we-know-it requires membranous cellular compartments, but it can passage through an unencapsulated protoplast form (Kim et al. 2001
The first and simplest quest to synthesize self-replication aimed for nucleic acid-templated replication from activated nucleotide analogs without enzymes. Disappointingly, short oligomers proved impotent (Orgel 1995
A second plan is to evolve an RNA replicase made of RNA from natural catalytic RNAs and/or libraries of random RNAs (Szostak et al. 2001
A third completely in vitro plan is synthetic life that includes DNA and translation, which has the benefit of tying in more closely with existing biology. The plan is to assemble a biochemically derived list of some 151 genes from E. coli proposed to encode a near-minimal, self-replicating system dependent only on small molecule substrates (Fig. 4) (Forster and Church 2006
Of the current SBPs, the in vivo ones have received more coverage in the literature, perhaps because of safety concerns and the obviousness of scalability. But the benefits of in vitro SBPs should not be underestimated. Many biopolymer syntheses are already better scaled up in cell-free systems, such as linear DNAs by oligo synthesis and PCR, unmodified RNAs by in vitro transcription, and peptide libraries by in vitro transcription/translation. And engineering flexibility is much greater in vitro, unshackled from cellular viability, complexity, and walls. One promise of in vitro SBPs is applications. Current in vitro methods for synthesizing proteins and evolving protein, nucleic acid, and small-molecule ligands will be improved to accelerate production of new reagents, diagnostics, and drugs. New methods will be developed for synthesizing circular DNAs, modified RNAs, proteins containing unnatural amino acids, and liposomes. The other promise of in vitro SBPs is basic knowledge. Until we can assemble a form of life in vitro from defined, functionally understood macromolecules and small-molecule substrates, how can we say that we understand the secret of life?
We thank many colleagues for discussions and comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by an NIH K08 grant (to A.C.F.) and a DOE GTL Center grant (to G.M.C.).
3 Corresponding authors. E-mail a.forster{at}vanderbilt.edu; fax (615) 936-5555.
E-mail: http://arep.med.harvard.edu/; fax (617) 432-6513. Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.5776007
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