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Elisa Franco
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Higher-order cellular information processing with synthetic RNA devices.

Win MN, Smolke CD

Science. 2008 Oct 17; 322(5900): 456-60.


Abstract

The engineering of biological systems is anticipated to provide effective solutions to challenges that include energy and food production, environmental quality, and health and medicine. Our ability to transmit information to and from living systems, and to process and act on information inside cells, is critical to advancing the scale and complexity at which we can engineer, manipulate, and probe biological systems. We developed a general approach for assembling RNA devices that can execute higher-order cellular information processing operations from standard components. The engineered devices can function as logic gates (AND, NOR, NAND, or OR gates) and signal filters, and exhibit cooperativity. RNA devices process and transmit molecular inputs to targeted protein outputs, linking computation to gene expression and thus the potential to control cellular function.

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  • Elisa Franco (Caltech) created an event in Caltech BioControl
    Week3-9
    Wednesday, October 29, 2008 - 10:00am at Steele Library

    Cellular computing

    October 9, 2009
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  • Postgenomic

    Kevin: Very cool. It’s going to be a while before this is ready for any sort of practical application, but it is another great tool for the cyborg scientists of the future to use.Engineers from the California Institute of Technology have created a “plug-and-play”

    http://www.thinkgene.com/caltech-engineers-build-first-ever-multi-input-...

    Higher-order cellular information processing with synthetic RNA devices. Win MN (2008) Science.
    October 18, 2008
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