Structural materials meet synthetic biology in biomedical applications


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Date

2024-01

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

This review summarizes recent progress at the confluence of structural biomaterials research and synthetic biology, focusing on biomedical applications involving programmed mammalian cells and bacterial cells. Synthetic biology, which aims to build genetic circuits and bottom-up synthetic networks in microbial and mammalian cells, can benefit greatly from the bio-activity and encapsulation and delivery abilities of structural biomaterials, which can facilitate gene transfection and control of gene switches, as well as cell cultivation and transplantation. Conversely, genetically engineered cells can play roles in the synthesis and modification of structural biomaterials. We discuss the opportunities opened up by this multi-disciplinary interplay, as well as the challenges facing the application of these capabilities for the development of next-generation diagnostic and therapeutic tools.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

72

Pages / Article No.

163 - 182

Publisher

Elsevier

Event

Edition / version

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Subject

Gene engineering; Structural materials; Living materials; Biomedical application; Synthetic biology

Organisational unit

03694 - Fussenegger, Martin / Fussenegger, Martin check_circle

Notes

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