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Synthetic Biology: Important Links and Applications for Bioinformatics
Previous work of my own has led to this database, which examines various biological
circuits and the resulting engineering properties.
At MIT, important molecular circuits and their descriptions are bundled and made
available to the general public as a “repository”, i.e. a collection of construction manuals.
There is also a race for the 3D printers to get and program better and better instructions
for such three-dimensional printer templates. It is also possible to print various cells and
tissues. Finally, people are also trying to make a 3-D printer themselves with a 3-D printer.
I’m somewhat skeptical of the latter enterprise, but it’s amusing to read (because of the
danger of overly active self-reproducing machines, but also because of fundamental limi
tations of this approach, e.g. plastic remains plastic, other components are missing).
The possibilities of DNA as an extremely good and very compact digital storage for
information are explained in the film. The concept was first demonstrated using Next
Generation Sequencing by Church et al. (2012). Ultra-long storage was published by
Grass et al. (2015), and the encoding of images, sounds, and texts was analyzed by
Goldman et al. (2013). Thus, image files can be effortlessly determined from long DNA
sequences using double sequencing and next generation sequencing.
GoSynthetic Database
https://gosyn.bioapps.biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de/index.php
MIT BioBricks
https://biobricks.org/
Rep-Repro/Darwin 3-D Printer
Rep-Repro/Darwin 3-D Printer: https://bigrep.com/de/
“Eternal” (Thousands or Millions of Years) Permanent Storage via DNA
DNA storage: https://www.3sat.de/wissen/nano/dna-als-datenspeicher-100.html
13.8 Using the Language of Life Technically with the Help of Synthetic Biology