Abstract

Advances in synthetic biology have made microbes easier to engineer than ever before. However, synthetic biology in animals and plants has lagged behind. Since it is now known that the phenotype of higher organisms depends largely on their microbiota, we propose that this is an easier route to achieving synthetic biology applications in these organisms.

Highlights

  • Scope and scale of these applications provide obvious obstacles to the development of effective biotechnologies, but a more immediate limitation to realizing these technologies is the relative lack of genetic tools and insights which would allow the tinkering and rewiring of more complex organisms such as animals and plants

  • Existing examples of using endophytes as alternatives to engineering plant hosts inspire the manipulation of the simpler bacterial genome to elicit effects upon the more complicated plant cell

  • We propose that engineering endophytic bacteria is the surest way to quickly and efficiently engineer our food systems and our environment to ensure a sustainable future

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Summary

Introduction

Scope and scale of these applications provide obvious obstacles to the development of effective biotechnologies, but a more immediate limitation to realizing these technologies is the relative lack of genetic tools and insights which would allow the tinkering and rewiring of more complex organisms such as animals and plants. Because of the natural intimate interactions between higher eukaryotes and microbes and the effect of these on phenotype, it is our vision that a faster, more tractable route to the engineering animal and plant phenotypes is via engineering their microbiomes.

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