From qualitative to quantitative: The state of the art and challenges for plant synthetic biology

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Abstract

Backgrounds: As an increasing number of synthetic switches and circuits have been created for plant systems and of synthetic products produced in plant chassis, plant synthetic biology is taking a strong foothold in agriculture and medicine. The ever-exploding data has also promoted the expansion of toolkits in this field. Genetic parts libraries and quantitative characterization approaches have been developed. However, plant synthetic biology is still in its infancy. The considerations for selecting biological parts to design and construct genetic circuits with predictable functions remain desired. Results: In this article, we review the current biotechnological progresses in field of plant synthetic biology. Assembly standardization and quantitative approaches of genetic parts and genetic circuits are discussed. We also highlight the main challenges in the iterative cycles of design-build-test-learn for introducing novel traits into plants. Conclusion: Plant synthetic biology promises to provide important solutions to many issues in agricultural production, human health care, and environmental sustainability. However, tremendous challenges exist in this field. For example, the quantitative characterization of genetic parts is limited; the orthogonality and the transfer functions of circuits are unpredictable; and also, the mathematical modeling-assisted circuits design still needs to improve predictability and reliability. These challenges are expected to be resolved in the near future as interests in this field are intensifying.

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Tian, C., Li, J., & Wang, Y. (2023, September 1). From qualitative to quantitative: The state of the art and challenges for plant synthetic biology. Quantitative Biology. Higher Education Press Limited Company. https://doi.org/10.15302/J-QB-022-0326

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