Developmental Design of Synthetic Bacterial Architectures by Morphogenetic Engineering
Authored by Taras Kowaliw, Rene Doursat, Olivier Michel, Jonathan Pascalie, Martin Potier, Jean-Louis Giavitto, Antoine Spicher
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.5b00246
Sponsors:
French Agence Nationale de la Recherch
Platforms:
MGS
Proto
Gro
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/acssynbio.5b00246/suppl_file/sb5b00246_si_001.zip
Abstract
Synthetic biology is an emerging scientific field that promotes the
standardized manufacturing of biological components without natural
equivalents. Its goal is to create artificial living systems that can
meet various needs in health care or energy domains. While most works
are focused on the individual bacterium as a chemical reactor, our
project, SynBioTIC, addresses a novel and more complex challenge: shape
engineering; that is, the redesign of natural morphogenesis toward a new
kind of developmental 3D printing. Potential applications include organ
growth, natural computing in biocircuits, or future vegetal houses. To
create in silico multicellular organisms that exhibit specific shapes, we construe their development as an iterative process combining
fundamental collective phenomena such as homeostasis, patterning, segmentation, and limb growth. Our numerical experiments rely on the
existing Escherichia coli simulator Gro, a physicochemical computation
platform offering reaction-diffusion and collision dynamics solvers. The
synthetic bioware of our model executes a set of rules, or genome, in
each cell. Cells can differentiate into several predefined types
associated with specific actions (divide, emit signal, detect signal, die). Transitions between types are triggered by conditions involving
internal and external sensors that detect various protein levels inside
and around the cell. Indirect communication between bacteria is relayed
by morphogen diffusion and the mechanical constraints of 2D packing.
Starting from a single bacterium, the overall architecture emerges in a
purely endogenous fashion through a series of developmental stages, inlcuding proliferation, differentiation, morphogen diffusion, and
synchronization. The genome can be parametrized to control the growth
and features of appendages individually. As exemplified by the L and T
shapes that we obtain, certain precursor cells can be inhibited while
others can create limbs of varying size (divergence of the homology).
Such morphogenetic phenotypes open the way to more complex shapes made
of a recursive array of core bodies and limbs and, most importantly, to
an evolutionary developmental exploration of unplanned functional forms.
Tags
Simulation
networks
population
growth
System
Expression
Biology
Robots
Cell communication
Quorum