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Review
. 2010 Sep 14;20(17):R772-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2010.06.049.

Using synthetic biology to understand the evolution of gene expression

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Free article
Review

Using synthetic biology to understand the evolution of gene expression

Travis S Bayer. Curr Biol. .
Free article

Abstract

The evolution of phenotype is often based on changes in gene expression rather than changes in protein-coding sequence. Gene expression is controlled by complex networks of interacting regulators that act through a variety of biochemical mechanisms. Perturbation of these networks can have profound effects on the fitness of organisms. This highlights an important challenge: the investigation of whether the mechanisms and network architectures we observe in Nature evolved in response to selective pressure--and, if so, what that pressure might have been--or whether the architectures are a result of non-adaptive forces. Synthetic biologists aim to construct artificial genetic and biological systems to increase our understanding of Nature as well as for a number of biotechnological applications. In this review, I will highlight how engineering 'synthetic' control of gene expression provides a way to test evolutionary hypotheses. Synthetic biology might allow us to investigate experimentally the evolutionary paths not taken by extant organisms.

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