Literature DB >> 27076218

Mammalian Synthetic Biology: Time for Big MACs.

Andrea Martella1, Steven M Pollard2, Junbiao Dai3, Yizhi Cai1.   

Abstract

The enabling technologies of synthetic biology are opening up new opportunities for engineering and enhancement of mammalian cells. This will stimulate diverse applications in many life science sectors such as regenerative medicine, development of biosensing cell lines, therapeutic protein production, and generation of new synthetic genetic regulatory circuits. Harnessing the full potential of these new engineering-based approaches requires the design and assembly of large DNA constructs-potentially up to chromosome scale-and the effective delivery of these large DNA payloads to the host cell. Random integration of large transgenes, encoding therapeutic proteins or genetic circuits into host chromosomes, has several drawbacks such as risks of insertional mutagenesis, lack of control over transgene copy-number and position-specific effects; these can compromise the intended functioning of genetic circuits. The development of a system orthogonal to the endogenous genome is therefore beneficial. Mammalian artificial chromosomes (MACs) are functional, add-on chromosomal elements, which behave as normal chromosomes-being replicating and portioned to daughter cells at each cell division. They are deployed as useful gene expression vectors as they remain independent from the host genome. MACs are maintained as a single-copy and can accommodate multiple gene expression cassettes of, in theory, unlimited DNA size (MACs up to 10 megabases have been constructed). MACs therefore enabled control over ectopic gene expression and represent an excellent platform to rapidly prototype and characterize novel synthetic gene circuits without recourse to engineering the host genome. This review describes the obstacles synthetic biologists face when working with mammalian systems and how the development of improved MACs can overcome these-particularly given the spectacular advances in DNA synthesis and assembly that are fuelling this research area.

Entities:  

Keywords:  artificial chromosome; chromosome engineering; mammalian synthetic biology

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27076218     DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.6b00074

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Synth Biol        ISSN: 2161-5063            Impact factor:   5.110


  4 in total

Review 1.  Screening out irrelevant cell-based models of disease.

Authors:  Peter Horvath; Nathalie Aulner; Marc Bickle; Anthony M Davies; Elaine Del Nery; Daniel Ebner; Maria C Montoya; Päivi Östling; Vilja Pietiäinen; Leo S Price; Spencer L Shorte; Gerardo Turcatti; Carina von Schantz; Neil O Carragher
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2016-09-12       Impact factor: 84.694

2.  Building with intent: technologies and principles for engineering mammalian cell-based therapies to sense and respond.

Authors:  Joseph J Muldoon; Patrick S Donahue; Taylor B Dolberg; Joshua N Leonard
Journal:  Curr Opin Biomed Eng       Date:  2017-10-18

3.  Engineering Synthetic Chromosomes by Sequential Loading of Multiple Genomic Payloads over 100 Kilobase Pairs in Size.

Authors:  Amy Greene; Kara Pascarelli; Dominique Broccoli; Edward Perkins
Journal:  Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 6.698

4.  Reprogramming of Fibroblasts to Oligodendrocyte Progenitor-like Cells Using CRISPR/Cas9-Based Synthetic Transcription Factors.

Authors:  Mantas Matjusaitis; Laura J Wagstaff; Andrea Martella; Bart Baranowski; Carla Blin; Sabine Gogolok; Anna Williams; Steven M Pollard
Journal:  Stem Cell Reports       Date:  2019-11-07       Impact factor: 7.765

  4 in total

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