Abstract

The fascination produced by the possibility of engineering plants with augmented capabilities has accompanied plant biotechnology since its origins. This prospect has become even more relevant in present times under the pressure imposed by climate change and population growth. Today´s plant biotechnologists appraise this challenge with the tools of synthetic biology, which facilitate the assembly of synthetic gene circuits (SGCs) from their modular components. Transcriptional SGCs take environmental or endogenous inputs and operate them using transcriptional signals in ways that do not necessarily occur in nature, generating new physiological outputs. Many genetic components have been developed over the years that can be employed in the design and construction of plant SGCs. This review aims to provide an updated and categorized view of the components available, proposing a general scheme that facilitates the classification of circuit components in sensor, processor, and actuator modules. Following this analogy, we review the latest advances in the design of SGC and discuss the main challenges ahead.

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