Synthetic
Biology:
From programming
bacteria to programming stem cells
Professor Ron Weiss
Princeton University
Abstract Synthetic biology is revolutionizing how we
conceptualize and approach the engineering of biological systems.
Recent advances in the field are allowing us to expand beyond the
construction and analysis of small gene networks towards the implementation of
complex multicellular systems with a variety of applications. In this talk I
will describe our integrated computational experimental approach to engineering complex behavior in
living systems ranging from bacteria to stem cells. In our research, we appropriate useful design principles
from electrical engineering and other well established fields. These principles include abstraction,
standardization, modularity, and computer aided design. But we also spend
considerable effort towards understanding what makes synthetic biology
different from all other existing engineering disciplines and discovering new
design and construction rules that are effective for this unique discipline.
We will briefly describe the implementation of genetic
circuits with finely-tuned digital and analog behavior and the use of
artificial cell-cell communication to coordinate the behavior of cell
populations for programmed pattern formation. Recent results with implementing Turing patterns with
engineering bacteria will be presented.
Arguably the most significant contribution of synthetic biology will be
in medical applications such as tissue engineering. We will discuss preliminary experimental results for
obtaining precise spatiotemporal control over stem cell differentiation. For this purpose, we couple elements
for gene regulation, cell fate determination, signal processing, and artificial
cell-cell communication. We will
conclude by discussing the design and preliminary results for creating an
artificial tissue homeostasis system where genetically engineered stem cells
maintain indefinitely a desired level of pancreatic beta cells despite attacks
by the autoimmune response. The
system, which relies on artificial cell-cell communication, various regulatory
network motifs, and programmed differentiation into beta cells, may one day be
useful for the treatment (or cure) of diabetes.
Bio: Ron Weiss is an Associate Professor of Electrical
Engineering at Princeton University, and also holds a faculty appointment in
the Department of Molecular Biology. He received his PhD from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering (2001).
His research focuses primarily on synthetic biology, where he programs cell
behavior by constructing and modeling biochemical and cellular computing
systems.. Weiss is interested in both hands-on experimental work and in
implementing software infrastructures for simulation and design work. For his
work in Synthetic Biology, Weiss has received MIT's Technology Review
Magazine's TR100 Award ("top 100 young innovators", 2003), was
selected as a speaker for the National Academy of Engineering's Frontiers of
Engineering Symposium (2003), received the E. Lawrence Keyes, Jr./Emerson
Electric Company Faculty Advancement Award at Princeton University (2003), his
research in synthetic biology was named by MIT's Technology Review Magazine as
one of "10 emerging technologies that will change your world" (2004),
was chosen as a finalist for the World Technology NetworkÕs Biotechnology Award
(2004), and was selected as a speaker for the National Academy of Sciences
Frontiers of Science Symposium (2005).
Friday, April 3,
2009
3:30 – 4:30p.m
Rm. 1500 EECS