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The long journey towards standards for engineering biosystems: Are the Molecular Biology and the Biotech communities ready to standardise?

Authors :
European Commission
National Science Foundation (US)
Beal, Jacob
Goñi-Moreno, Ángel
Myers, Chris
Hecht, Ariel
Vicente, María del Carmen
Parco, María
Schmidt, Markus
Timmis, Kenneth N.
Baldwin, Geoff
Friedrichs, Steffi
Freemont, Paul
Kiga, Daisuke
Ordozgoiti, Elena
Rennig, Maja
Rios, Leonardo
Tanner, Kristie
Lorenzo, Víctor de
Porcar, Manuel
European Commission
National Science Foundation (US)
Beal, Jacob
Goñi-Moreno, Ángel
Myers, Chris
Hecht, Ariel
Vicente, María del Carmen
Parco, María
Schmidt, Markus
Timmis, Kenneth N.
Baldwin, Geoff
Friedrichs, Steffi
Freemont, Paul
Kiga, Daisuke
Ordozgoiti, Elena
Rennig, Maja
Rios, Leonardo
Tanner, Kristie
Lorenzo, Víctor de
Porcar, Manuel
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Standards are the basis of technology: they allow rigorous description and exact measurement of properties, reliable reproducibility and a common “language” that enables different communities to work together. Molecular biology was in part created by physicists; yet, the field did not inherit the focus on the quantitation, the definition of system boundaries and the robust, unequivocal language that is characteristic of the other natural sciences. However, synthetic biology (SynBio) increasingly requires scientific, technical, operational and semantic standards for the field to become a full‐fledged engineering discipline with a high level of accuracy in the design, manufacturing and performance of biological artefacts. Although the benefits of adopting standards are clear, the community is still largely reluctant to accept them, owing to concerns about adoption costs and losses in flexibility.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286563262
Document Type :
Electronic Resource