Researchers Write Languages To Design Synthetic Living Systems Useful For New Products, Health Care
Researchers at Virginia Tech and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have used a computer-aided design tool to create genetic languages to guide the design of biological systems.
Known as GenoCAD, the open-source software was developed by researchers at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute at Virginia Tech to help synthetic biologists capture biological rules to engineer organisms that produce useful products or health-care solutions from inexpensive, renewable materials.
GenoCAD helps researchers in the design of protein expression vectors, artificial gene networks, and other genetic constructs, essentially combining engineering approaches with biology.
Synthetic biologists have an increasingly large library of naturally derived and synthetic parts at their disposal to design and build living systems. These parts are the words of a DNA language and the “grammar” a set of design rules governing the language.
- Tags:
- Amanda Wilson
- computer-assisted design (CAD)
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
- Dennis Dean
- genetic languages
- genetics
- GenoCAD
- healthcare
- Jean Peccoud
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Office of Naval Research (ONR)
- Oliver Purcell
- open source software (OSS)
- Sakiko Okumoto
- synthetic biology
- Timothy Lu
- Virginia Bioinformatics Institute (VBI)
- Virginia Tech (VT)
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