Issue 20, 2017

Droplet microfluidics for synthetic biology

Abstract

Synthetic biology is an interdisciplinary field that aims to engineer biological systems for useful purposes. Organism engineering often requires the optimization of individual genes and/or entire biological pathways (consisting of multiple genes). Advances in DNA sequencing and synthesis have recently begun to enable the possibility of evaluating thousands of gene variants and hundreds of thousands of gene combinations. However, such large-scale optimization experiments remain cost-prohibitive to researchers following traditional molecular biology practices, which are frequently labor-intensive and suffer from poor reproducibility. Liquid handling robotics may reduce labor and improve reproducibility, but are themselves expensive and thus inaccessible to most researchers. Microfluidic platforms offer a lower entry price point alternative to robotics, and maintain high throughput and reproducibility while further reducing operating costs through diminished reagent volume requirements. Droplet microfluidics have shown exceptional promise for synthetic biology experiments, including DNA assembly, transformation/transfection, culturing, cell sorting, phenotypic assays, artificial cells and genetic circuits.

Graphical abstract: Droplet microfluidics for synthetic biology

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
30 may 2017
Accepted
09 avq 2017
First published
10 avq 2017

Lab Chip, 2017,17, 3388-3400

Droplet microfluidics for synthetic biology

P. C. Gach, K. Iwai, P. W. Kim, N. J. Hillson and A. K. Singh, Lab Chip, 2017, 17, 3388 DOI: 10.1039/C7LC00576H

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