FAQ: Why did Synthetic Biologist Chris Voigt of MIT choose NEB 10-beta for DNA assembly and cloning?

Can a living cell perform computation? By encoding circuits in DNA and transforming them into a living bacterial host, organisms can be manipulated to process environmental cues and have altered biological function. This repurposing of biological function is the cornerstone of synthetic biology, and is transforming markets such as biofuels and the food industry by engineering novel organisms designed for manufacture or biological sensing. Accomplishing this requires reliable assembly of large DNA constructs with specific arrangements of DNA parts, and a well-characterized organism in which to put them.

The design of large DNA constructs is complex and assembly can be a formidable challenge. Chris Voigt, a synthetic biologist at the Broad Institute, and his team developed a computational environment (Cello) to standardize design of these assemblies based on user-supplied parameters and constraint. As Voigt and his team point out, the behavior of genetic circuits is dependent on many parts whose function can vary depending on genetic context, strain and growth conditions.

When it came to selecting a competent cell strain, they chose NEB 10-beta Competent E. coli. Why was NEB 10-beta was chosen for Cello?

  • Reduced recombination from RecA1 mutation
  • Ability to clone and propagate large plasmids
  • High transformation efficiency
  • Better growth on M9 + glucose than some other strains
  • Resistant to phage T1
  • Defined genotype
  • Already being used in many labs around the world
  1. NEB TV Episode 7

    NEB® TV Ep. 7 – Synthetic Biology/ CRISPR

    Learn more about CRISPR/Cas9 and synthetic biology, where these fields are headed, and how they are being applied in the classroom in the latest episode of NEB TV.