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Economist July 2, 2007 published online: Really
New Advances
Theme: RNA control and developmental systems biology
SIR —
The discoveries summarized in your excellent article,
when combined with the result of Venter’s group demonstrating the feasibility
of transplanting the whole genome of one organism into another different
unicellular organism, open the door for an even bigger biological big
bang. By combining synthetic biology with RNA control, it creates the
possibility of understanding minimal multicellular systems. Using computer
modeling and simulation to design genomes for artificial multicellular
organisms, one can then create synthetic genomes and transplant them into
genomeless stem cells which then generate synthetic multicellular systems.
Granted this is futuristic, but the possibility is approaching rapidly.
Such minimal, synthetic multicellular organisms and their corresponding
computer-simulated mirror organisms, open the door to better understanding
of development, evolution, tissue regeneration and multicellular diseases
such as cancer. The key here is combining the in silico, computer
modeling and simulation methods of multicellular systems biology with
the in vivo methods of synthetic biology.
Eric Werner
Oxford
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