Manuscript: Synthetic gene networks that count.

Synthetic gene networks that count.

  • Ari E Friedland
  • Timothy K Lu
  • Xiao Wang
  • David Shi
  • George Church
  • James J Collins
Science 2009; 324 (5931): 1199-1202
Abstract
Synthetic gene networks can be constructed to emulate digital circuits and devices, giving one the ability to program and design cells with some of the principles of modern computing, such as counting. A cellular counter would enable complex synthetic programming and a variety of biotechnology applications. Here, we report two complementary synthetic genetic counters in Escherichia coli that can count up to three induction events: the first, a riboregulated transcriptional cascade, and the second, a recombinase-based cascade of memory units. These modular devices permit counting of varied user-defined inputs over a range of frequencies and can be expanded to count higher numbers.
Model Organism Tissue Process type
friedland1 Escherichia coli gene regulation