4.7 Review

Recent advances in synthetic biology of cyanobacteria

Journal

APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 13, Pages 5457-5471

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00253-018-9046-x

Keywords

Synthetic biology; Biosensors; Modularity; Standardized parts; Portability; Tunability

Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology, Government of India [BT/EB/PAN IIT/2012]
  2. Indo-US Science and Technology Forum for Indo-US Advanced Bioenergy Consortium (IUABC) [IUSSTF/JCERDC-SGB/IUABC-IITB/2016]
  3. Office of Science, Department of Energy-BER

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Cyanobacteria are attractive hosts that can be engineered for the photosynthetic production of fuels, fine chemicals, and proteins from CO2. Moreover, the responsiveness of these photoautotrophs towards different environmental signals, such as light, CO2, diurnal cycle, and metals make them potential hosts for the development of biosensors. However, engineering these hosts proves to be a challenging and lengthy process. Synthetic biology can make the process of biological engineering more predictable through the use of standardized biological parts that are well characterized and tools to assemble them. While significant progress has been made with model heterotrophic organisms, many of the parts and tools are not portable in cyanobacteria. Therefore, efforts are underway to develop and characterize parts derived from cyanobacteria. In this review, we discuss the reported parts and tools with the objective to develop cyanobacteria as cell factories or biosensors. We also discuss the issues related to characterization, tunability, portability, and the need to develop enabling technologies to engineer this green chassis.

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