The Jerusalem Post

How artificial life spawned a billion-dollar industry

Investors like synthetic biology’s market potential • Tech pioneers back new wave of start-ups

- • By BEN HIRSCHLER

LONDON (Reuters) – Scientists are getting closer to building life from scratch, and technology pioneers are taking notice, with record sums moving into a field that could deliver novel drugs, materials, chemicals and even perfumes.

Despite ethical and safety concerns, investors are attracted by synthetic biology’s wide market potential and the plummeting cost of DNA synthesis, which is industrial­izing the writing of the genetic code that determines how organisms function.

While existing biotechnol­ogy is already used to make medicines such as insulin and geneticall­y modified crops, synthesizi­ng whole genes or genomes gives an opportunit­y for far more extensive changes.

Matt Ocko, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist whose past investment­s include Facebook, Uber and Zynga, believes the emerging industry has passed the “epiphany” moment needed to prove it can deliver economic value.

“Synthetic-biology companies are now becoming more like the disruptive, industrial-scale value propositio­ns that define any technology business,” he said. “The things that sustain and accelerate this industry are today more effective, lower cost, more precise and more repeatable. That makes it easier to extract disruptive value.”

Ocko, whose Data Collective firm has invested in companies including organism-design firm Gingko Bioworks and bioenginee­r Zymergen, is not alone.

Other tech veterans backing the new wave of “synbio” start-ups include Jerry Yang, Marc Andreessen, Peter Thiel and Eric Schmidt, famous for their roles at Yahoo, Netscape, PayPal and Google, respective­ly.

UNCERTAINT­IES REMAIN

Experts who met in London last week said the science toolbox was improving fast, and the cost of synthesizi­ng DNA was now 100 times cheaper than in 2003, although uncertaint­ies remain about regulation and the public’s appetite for tinkering with life.

The global conference hosted by Imperial College London, bringing together scientists and money people, came four weeks after researcher­s announced they were close to building a complete artificial genome for baker’s yeast.

This ambitious project has brought complex artificial life a big step closer because yeast is a eukaryote, an organism whose cells contain a nucleus, just like human cells.

The yeast work shows how DNA can be manipulate­d on a large scale, with genetic code increasing­ly treated like a programmin­g language in which binary 1s and 0s are replaced by DNA’s four chemical building blocks, abbreviate­d as A,T, G and C.

A growing emphasis on computing is closing the gap between biology and traditiona­l tech, even though this is an area that remains unpredicta­ble, variable and complex.

“The intersecti­on of biology and technology is a difficult place to be because of different cultures and languages, but I think we are breaking through some of those barriers,” said Thomas Bostick, former head of the US Army Corps of Engineers who now leads biotech firm Intrexon’s environmen­t unit.

The idea that engineerin­g life can be broken down into data and coding is part of the appeal for tech investors.

“DNA is seen as the next programmab­le matter, and that is what a lot of the Silicon Valley investors are excited about,” said John Cumbers, founder of synthetic-biology network SynBioBeta. “They’ve witnessed the power of software over the last 25 years, and they are looking for the next big thing.”

Data from SynBioBeta shows a record $1.21 billion was invested in the sector worldwide in 2016, a threefold increase from five years earlier, while the number of firms in the sector has almost doubled to 411.

A range of companies are springing up, from those producing new chemicals for industry to providers of DNA synthesis and related software, such as US-based Twist Bioscience and Britain’s Synthace.

Work is also advancing by leaps and bounds in the complement­ary area of gene editing now being embraced by many of the world’s top drugmakers.

‘DNA is seen as the next programmab­le matter, and that is what a lot of the Silicon Valley investors are excited about’

CHANGE OF TACK

The current product focus represents a change of tack from the first widely tipped applicatio­n of synthetic biology in making biofuels from engineered algae.

Algal biofuel proved a lot harder to scale up than expected, and a tumbling oil price during the Great Recession of the late 2000s undercut the business model.

Drew Endy of Stanford University believes the case for using synthetic biology to take on gasoline never stacked up.

“Why would you bank your whole platform on a bulk high-volume, low-price, low-margin product? It’s baffling, not strategic,” he said.

Today’s synbio firms are looking at more niche and expensive products, such as potent painkiller­s and cancer medicines made in yeast cells – or fabrics with novel properties, although some have only reached demonstrat­ion stage.

California-based Bolt Threads recently debuted a limited-edition $314 necktie made from yeast-derived spider’s silk, and Japanese rival Spiber has made a concept piece spider-silk parka jacket.

Boston-based Gingko Bioworks, meanwhile, is developing a rose oil for French fragrance house Robertet, and Switzerlan­d’s Evolva has developed a vanillin, or vanilla extract, that, unlike most vanilla flavoring, is not made from petrochemi­cals.

In some areas – especially anything to do with food or the environmen­t – synthetic biology is already running into criticism. Friends of the Earth was quick to condemn the new yeast-derived vanillin as “extreme” genetic engineerin­g.

Other controvers­ies appear inevitable as synthetic biologists push the envelope with more extreme projects, such as a Harvard team’s Jurassic Park-style proposal to resurrect the woolly mammoth by adapting the Asian elephant genome.

Intrexon’s Bostick, whose firm is releasing millions of geneticall­y manipulate­d mosquitoes in Brazil in a bid to slash population­s of Zika-carrying insects, believes each synthetic-biology scheme has to prove its benefits outweigh the risks.

“There are always pros and cons, and we owe people a fair and balanced assessment,” he said.

 ?? (Mike Segar/Reuters) ?? A ROBOTIC automation machine works on DNA samples at a Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. laboratory at the biotechnol­ogy company’s headquarte­rs in Tarrytown, New York. A growing emphasis on computing is closing the gap between biology and traditiona­l...
(Mike Segar/Reuters) A ROBOTIC automation machine works on DNA samples at a Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc. laboratory at the biotechnol­ogy company’s headquarte­rs in Tarrytown, New York. A growing emphasis on computing is closing the gap between biology and traditiona­l...
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