Issue 4, 2016

Nature versus design: synthetic biology or how to build a biological non-machine

Abstract

The engineering ideal of synthetic biology presupposes that organisms are composed of standard, interchangeable parts with a predictive behaviour. In one word, organisms are literally recognized as machines. Yet living objects are the result of evolutionary processes without any purposiveness, not of a design by external agents. Biological components show massive overlapping and functional degeneracy, standard-free complexity, intrinsic variation and context dependent performances. However, although organisms are not full-fledged machines, synthetic biologists may still be eager for machine-like behaviours from artificially modified biosystems.

Graphical abstract: Nature versus design: synthetic biology or how to build a biological non-machine

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
25 Sep 2015
Accepted
11 Nov 2015
First published
13 Nov 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Integr. Biol., 2016,8, 451-455

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