Publication | Closed Access
Toward an artificial cell based on gene expression in vesicles
168
Citations
25
References
2005
Year
Molecular BiologyExtracellular MicrovesiclesSynthetic CircuitCytoskeletonBiological ComputingCellular PhysiologyDna ComputingArtificial CellMacromolecular MachineGene ExpressionCell EngineeringCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringCell OrganelleNatural SciencesDna Synthetic GenomeSynthetic BiologyVon NeumannProtein EngineeringCellular BiochemistryMedicine
We present a new experimental approach to build an artificial cell using the translation machinery of a cell-free expression system as the hardware and a DNA synthetic genome as the software. This approach, inspired by the self-replicating automata of von Neumann, uses cytoplasmic extracts, encapsulated in phospholipid vesicles, to assemble custom-made genetic circuits to develop the functions of a minimal cell. Although this approach can find applications, especially in biotechnology, the primary goal is to understand how a DNA algorithm can be designed to build an operating system that has some of the properties of life. We provide insights on this cell-free approach as well as new results to transform step by step a long-lived vesicle bioreactor into an artificial cell. We show how the green fluorescent protein can be anchored to the membrane and we give indications of a possible insertion mechanism of integral membrane proteins. With vesicles composed of different phospholipids, the fusion protein alpha-hemolysin-eGFP can be expressed to reveal patterns on the membrane. The specific degradation complex ClpXP from E. coli is introduced to create a sink for the synthesized proteins. Perspectives and subsequent limitations of this approach are discussed.
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