Systems approaches for synthetic biology: a pathway toward mammalian design

Front Physiol. 2013 Oct 9:4:285. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2013.00285. eCollection 2013.

Abstract

We review methods of understanding cellular interactions through computation in order to guide the synthetic design of mammalian cells for translational applications, such as regenerative medicine and cancer therapies. In doing so, we argue that the challenges of engineering mammalian cells provide a prime opportunity to leverage advances in computational systems biology. We support this claim systematically, by addressing each of the principal challenges to existing synthetic bioengineering approaches-stochasticity, complexity, and scale-with specific methods and paradigms in systems biology. Moreover, we characterize a key set of diverse computational techniques, including agent-based modeling, Bayesian network analysis, graph theory, and Gillespie simulations, with specific utility toward synthetic biology. Lastly, we examine the mammalian applications of synthetic biology for medicine and health, and how computational systems biology can aid in the continued development of these applications.

Keywords: computational biology; gene circuits; mammalian cell; multiscale modeling; regenerative medicine; signaling network; synthetic biology; systems biology.