Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems

Synthetic biology is a young field of applicative research aiming to design and build up artificial biological devices, useful for human applications. How synthetic biology emerged in past years and how the development of the Registry of Standard Biological Parts aimed to introduce one practical sta...

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Main Author: Ceroni, Francesca <1982>
Other Authors: Avanzolini, Guido
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3495/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-34952014-03-24T16:29:08Z Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems Ceroni, Francesca <1982> ING-INF/06 Bioingegneria elettronica e informatica Synthetic biology is a young field of applicative research aiming to design and build up artificial biological devices, useful for human applications. How synthetic biology emerged in past years and how the development of the Registry of Standard Biological Parts aimed to introduce one practical starting solution to apply the basics of engineering to molecular biology is presented in chapter 1 in the thesis The same chapter recalls how biological parts can make up a genetic program, the molecular cloning tecnique useful for this purpose, and an overview of the mathematical modeling adopted to describe gene circuit behavior. Although the design of gene circuits has become feasible the increasing complexity of gene networks asks for a rational approach to design gene circuits. A bottom-up approach was proposed, suggesting that the behavior of a complicated system can be predicted from the features of its parts. The option to use modular parts in large-scale networks will be facilitated by a detailed and shared characterization of their functional properties. Such a prediction, requires well-characterized mathematical models of the parts and of how they behave when assembled together. In chapter 2, the feasibility of the bottom-up approach in the design of a synthetic program in Escherichia coli bacterial cells is described. The rational design of gene networks is however far from being established. The synthetic biology approach can used the mathematical formalism to identify biological information not assessable with experimental measurements. In this context, chapter 3 describes the design of a synthetic sensor for identifying molecules of interest inside eukaryotic cells. The Registry of Standard parts collects standard and modular biological parts. To spread the use of BioBricks the iGEM competition was started. The ICM Laboratory, where Francesca Ceroni completed her Ph.D, partecipated with teams of students and Chapter 4 summarizes the projects developed. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Avanzolini, Guido 2011-04-08 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3495/ info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic ING-INF/06 Bioingegneria elettronica e informatica
spellingShingle ING-INF/06 Bioingegneria elettronica e informatica
Ceroni, Francesca <1982>
Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
description Synthetic biology is a young field of applicative research aiming to design and build up artificial biological devices, useful for human applications. How synthetic biology emerged in past years and how the development of the Registry of Standard Biological Parts aimed to introduce one practical starting solution to apply the basics of engineering to molecular biology is presented in chapter 1 in the thesis The same chapter recalls how biological parts can make up a genetic program, the molecular cloning tecnique useful for this purpose, and an overview of the mathematical modeling adopted to describe gene circuit behavior. Although the design of gene circuits has become feasible the increasing complexity of gene networks asks for a rational approach to design gene circuits. A bottom-up approach was proposed, suggesting that the behavior of a complicated system can be predicted from the features of its parts. The option to use modular parts in large-scale networks will be facilitated by a detailed and shared characterization of their functional properties. Such a prediction, requires well-characterized mathematical models of the parts and of how they behave when assembled together. In chapter 2, the feasibility of the bottom-up approach in the design of a synthetic program in Escherichia coli bacterial cells is described. The rational design of gene networks is however far from being established. The synthetic biology approach can used the mathematical formalism to identify biological information not assessable with experimental measurements. In this context, chapter 3 describes the design of a synthetic sensor for identifying molecules of interest inside eukaryotic cells. The Registry of Standard parts collects standard and modular biological parts. To spread the use of BioBricks the iGEM competition was started. The ICM Laboratory, where Francesca Ceroni completed her Ph.D, partecipated with teams of students and Chapter 4 summarizes the projects developed.
author2 Avanzolini, Guido
author_facet Avanzolini, Guido
Ceroni, Francesca <1982>
author Ceroni, Francesca <1982>
author_sort Ceroni, Francesca <1982>
title Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
title_short Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
title_full Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
title_fullStr Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
title_full_unstemmed Development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
title_sort development of synthetic molecular circuits for the control of cell systems
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2011
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/3495/
work_keys_str_mv AT ceronifrancesca1982 developmentofsyntheticmolecularcircuitsforthecontrolofcellsystems
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