2010 Annual Meeting

Session: Synthetic Systems Biology I

Systems biology is the study of whole biological ensembles, rather than isolated parts, in order to build a predictive biological understanding of a defined system’s behavior. Synthetic biology has been defined as the design and construction of systems that exhibit complex dynamical or logical behavior. The intersection between these two fields is likely to significantly enhance efforts in design-based biological engineering and therefore greatly increase human capability. This session will cover current applications of systems biology theory and techniques to aid in the design of synthetic biological systems. In addition, efforts that apply synthetic biology research as new tools to expand systems-level understanding or as new concepts in systems biology are of interest.

Chair

Lianhong Sun, University of Science of Technology of China

Co-Chair

Michael C. Jewett, Northwestern University

Presentations

08:30 AM

Kevin V. Solomon, Tae Seok Moon, Kristala L. J. Prather

09:10 AM

S. Marjan Varedi K., Daniel M. Janse, Xiaoxia (Nina) Lin, George M. Church

09:30 AM

10:00 AM

10:20 AM

Joshua Leonard, Shirley Samuel-Abraham, Nichole Daringer

10:40 AM