Bioengineers have developed a new construction kit for building custom sense-and-respond circuits in human cells. The research could revolutionize therapies for complex conditions like autoimmune disease and cancer.
Washington [USA], January 13 (ANI):
Bioengineers have developed a new construction kit for building custom
sense-and-respond circuits in human cells. The research could revolutionize
therapies for complex conditions like autoimmune disease and cancer.
Rice University bioengineers have
developed a new construction kit for building custom sense-and-respond circuits
in human cells. The research, published in the journal Science, denotes a major
breakthrough in the field of synthetic biology that could revolutionize
therapies for complex conditions like autoimmune disease and cancer.
"Imagine tiny processors inside cells
made of proteins that can 'decide' how to respond to specific signals like
inflammation, tumour growth markers or blood sugar levels," said Xiaoyu
Yang, a graduate student in the Systems, Synthetic and Physical Biology PhD
program at Rice who is the lead author on the study.
"This work brings us a whole lot
closer to being able to build 'smart cells' that can detect signs of disease
and immediately release customizable treatments in response."
The new approach to artificial cellular
circuit design relies on phosphorylation. It is a natural process cells use to
respond to their environment that features the addition of a phosphate group to
a protein.
Phosphorylation is involved in a wide
range of cellular functions, including the conversion of extracellular signals
into intracellular responses -- e.g., moving, secreting a substance, reacting
to a pathogen or expressing a gene.
In multicellular organisms,
phosphorylation-based signalling often involves a multistage, cascading effect
like falling dominoes.
Previous attempts at harnessing this
mechanism for therapeutic purposes in human cells have focused on
re-engineering native, existing signalling pathways.
However, the complexity of the pathways
makes them difficult to work with, so applications have remained fairly
limited.
Thanks to Rice researchers' new findings,
however, phosphorylation-based innovations in "smart cell"
engineering could see a significant uptick in the coming years. (ANI)
(The story has come from a syndicated feed
and has not been edited by the Tribune Staff.)
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