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In a step toward making living cells function as if
they were tiny computers, engineers at Princeton have
programmed bacteria to communicate with each other and produce
color-coded patterns.
The feat, accomplished in a
biology lab within the Department of Electrical Engineering,
represents an important proof-of-principle in an emerging
field known as "synthetic biology," which aims to harness
living cells as workhorses that detect hazards, build
structures or repair tissues and organs within the body.
"We are really moving beyond the ability to program
individual cells to programming a large collection -- millions
or billions -- of cells to do interesting things," said Ron
Weiss, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and
molecular biology.
Collaborating with researchers at
the California Institute of Technology, Weiss and graduate
student Subhayu Basu programmed E. coli bacteria to emit red
or green fluorescent light in response to a signal emitted
from another set of E. coli. In one experiment, the cells
glowed green when they sensed a higher concentration of the
signal chemical and red when they sensed a lower
concentration. In a Petri dish, they formed a bull’s-eye
pattern -- a green circle inside a red one -- surrounding the
sender cells.
In addition to demonstrating that the
genetic programming techniques work, this sensing system could
be useful for the detection of chemicals or organisms in
laboratory tests. "The bull’s-eye could tell you: This is
where the anthrax is," said Weiss.
The researchers
published their results in the April 28 issue of Nature. In
addition to Weiss and Basu, authors of the paper are
postdoctoral researcher Yoram Gerchman at Princeton and
professor of chemical engineering Frances Arnold and graduate
student Cynthia Collins at Caltech. It was funded by a grant
from the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
In previous work, including a paper published March 8
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences along
with Sara Hooshangi and Stephan Thiberge, Weiss showed the
feasibility of inserting engineered pieces of DNA into cells
to make them behave in the same manner as digital circuits.
The cells, for example, could be made to perform basic
mathematical logic and produce crisp, reliable readouts that
are more commonly associated with silicon chips than
biological organisms. The new paper applies similar techniques
to a large population of cells.
"Here we’re showing an
integrated package where the cells have an ability to send
messages and other cells have the ability to act on these
messages," said Weiss.
The creation of patterns, such
as the bull’s-eye effect, is a key step in one of Weiss’
eventual goals, which is to have the cells secrete materials
that build physical devices such as antennas or transmitters
in places that are hard for humans to reach. Programmed cells
also could be used to control the repair or construction of
tissues within the body, possibly guiding stem cells to the
locations where they are needed for the growth of new nerve or
bone cells in a process Weiss called "programmed tissue
engineering."
Even the early step of creating patterns
in a Petri dish, however, may be useful as a tool for other
scientists, particularly developmental biologists who are
trying to understand how the cells of an embryo arrange
themselves into patterns that become the various body parts of
a mature organism. In fruit fly embryos, for example, the
first cells are thought to differentiate into the head,
abdomen and other parts based on the concentration of chemical
signals that are emitted from the ends of the embryo.
In addition to conducting laboratory experiments,
Weiss and colleagues are creating computer models of their
engineered systems, which allow them to study how small
modifications would affect the ultimate behavior of the
organisms. So far, said Weiss, the experimental results have
matched the computer models fairly closely, but the goal is to
have a mathematically exact description of how each component
works.
"One of the nice things about synthetic biology
is that because we built the network from scratch, we should
be able to model all the important details," he said. At some
point in the future, he said, scientists will be able to
choose a behavior they want from cells, and a computer program
will create a genetic circuit to accomplish the task. "Then we
can do an experiment to see if the community of cells is
behaving as we desire. That is going to have a tremendous
number of applications."
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