Synthetic DNA is of increasing demand across many sectors of research and commercial activities. Engineering biology, therapy, data storage and nanotechnology are set for rapid developments if DNA can be provided at scale and low cost. Stimulated by successes in next generation sequencing and gene editing technologies, DNA synthesis is already a burgeoning industry. However, the synthesis of >200 bp sequences remains unaffordable. To overcome these limitations and start writing DNA as effectively as it is read, alternative technologies have been developed including molecular assembly and cloning methods, template-independent enzymatic synthesis, microarray and rolling circle amplification techniques. Here, we review the progress in developing and commercializing these technologies, which are exemplified by innovations from leading companies. We discuss pros and cons of each technology, the need for oversight and regulatory policies for DNA synthesis as a whole and give an overview of DNA synthesis business models.
The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria stimulates the search for antimicrobial materials capable of addressing challenges conventional antibiotics fail to address. The ability to target intracellular bacteria remains one of the...
The renaissance gene therapy experiences these days requires
specialist
biomaterials and a systemic understanding of major factors influencing
their ability to deliver genetic material. Peptide transfection systems
represent a major class of such biomaterials. Several peptidic reagents
have been commercialized to date. However, a comparative assessment
of peptide sequences alone without auxiliary support or excipients
against a common determinant for their ability to complex and deliver
DNA has been lacking. This study cross-compares commercial and experimental
transfection reagents from the same family of helical amphiphiles.
Factors defining the efficacy of DNA delivery including cell uptake
and gene expression are assessed along with cytotoxicity and DNA complexation.
The results show that despite differences in sequence composition,
length, and origin, peptide reagents of the same structural family
exhibit similar characteristics and limitations with common variability
trends. The cross-comparison revealed that functional DNA delivery
is independent of the peptide sequence used but is mediated by the
ability of the reagents to co-fold with DNA. Peptide folding proved
to be the common determinant for DNA complexation and delivery by
peptidic transfection reagents.
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