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Alternative Watson–Crick Synthetic Genetic Systems
Author(s) -
Steven A. Benner,
Nilesh B. Karalkar,
Shuichi Hoshika,
Roberto Laos,
Ryan W. Shaw,
Mariko F. Matsuura,
Diego Fajardo,
Patricia Moussatche
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cold spring harbor perspectives in biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.011
H-Index - 173
ISSN - 1943-0264
DOI - 10.1101/cshperspect.a023770
Subject(s) - watson , molecular structure of nucleic acids: a structure for deoxyribose nucleic acid , biology , foundation (evidence) , evolutionary biology , environmental ethics , library science , archaeology , genetics , philosophy , artificial intelligence , computer science , history , dna , base pair
In its "grand challenge" format in chemistry, "synthesis" as an activity sets out a goal that is substantially beyond current theoretical and technological capabilities. In pursuit of this goal, scientists are forced across uncharted territory, where they must answer unscripted questions and solve unscripted problems, creating new theories and new technologies in ways that would not be created by hypothesis-directed research. Thus, synthesis drives discovery and paradigm changes in ways that analysis cannot. Described here are the products that have arisen so far through the pursuit of one grand challenge in synthetic biology: Recreate the genetics, catalysis, evolution, and adaptation that we value in life, but using genetic and catalytic biopolymers different from those that have been delivered to us by natural history on Earth. The outcomes in technology include new diagnostic tools that have helped personalize the care of hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide. In science, the effort has generated a fundamentally different view of DNA, RNA, and how they work.

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