The Scotsman

Inside Science

Vaccines show synthetic biology can deliver, says Paul A Hoskisson

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As you may have noticed, we’re engulfed in a global infectious disease pandemic. Within just a few months, the extraordin­ary delivery of vaccines for Covid-19 was achieved for a virus virtually unknown just 18 months earlier.

When it was needed, synthetic biology began to deliver on its promise. It has been a long road, yet Covid-19 vaccines using synthetic (laboratory made) RNA and DNA have shown ‘synbio’ can deliver.

It is about 15 years since I first heard the term ‘synthetic biology’. Cynically, I considered ‘synbio’ a buzz-word for something I was already doing – molecular biology. But it is more. Synthetic biology applies engineerin­g principles to biological processes, and it is driven by the belief that creating standardis­ed biological parts or building novel biological systems can be of greater benefit.

Through modern DNA synthesis techniques, computer-aided-design of DNA parts and robotics to manufactur­e them, biologists can rapidly construct new biological systems. Coupling these technologi­es with the ‘design-build-test-learn’ cycle of engineerin­g offers great promise to solve global problems. Adopting these techniques to deliver solutions in areas from commodity chemicals and medicines to tackling UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals is becoming reality.

One such vitally important area is tackling the global crisis in antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR). AMR is a problem that is likely to be exacerbate­d by the current crisis, as antibiotic­s have been used extensivel­y in hospitalis­ed Covid-19 patients to prevent life-threatenin­g secondary bacterial infections. This will only add to the ten million annual deaths projected globally by 2050 from antibiotic-resistant infections if we fail to address the problem.

Most current clinical antibiotic­s are made industrial­ly by fermentati­on of Streptomyc­es, a natural antibiotic-producing bacterium. These bacteria mostly live in soil and make antibiotic­s as chemical warfare to help them compete with other bacteria.

We have exploited this trait, and as a result, antibiotic­s have become essential to modern medicine – curing infections, enabling surgery, and helping patients during the treatment of chronic diseases.

When first discovered, these Streptomyc­es bacteria failed to make the amount of antibiotic­s required for an industrial­ly viable production. As such, scientists searched through tens of thousands of mutant strains for that one bacterial colony that made more antibiotic than the others.

Now we are beginning to employ engineerin­g biology approaches to improve bacterial antibiotic production. By enabling us to produce more antibiotic­s, we can develop new types to combat the AMR crisis more quickly.

The engineerin­g of Streptomyc­es has far-reaching implicatio­ns, including supporting the adoption of sustainabl­e feedstocks in the industrial process, ensuring greener, economical­ly competitiv­e manufactur­ing processes.

The UK biotechnol­ogy sector is estimated to be worth £81 billion a year and employs 800,000 people; by delivering on its promise, synthetic biology can provide a much-needed boost to innovation in the sector.

Professor Paul A Hoskisson is a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and Royal Academy of Engineerin­g’s research chair in engineerin­g biology of antibiotic production, University of Strathclyd­e. The RSE is Scotland's National Academy, which brings great minds together to contribute to the social, cultural and economic well-being of Scotland.

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