@article{Panke_2020, title={Taming the Beast of Biology: Synthetic Biology and Biological Systems Engineering}, volume={74}, url={https://www.chimia.ch/chimia/article/view/2020_402}, DOI={10.2533/chimia.2020.402}, abstractNote={ Despite the availability of a variety of ’ -omics ’ technologies to support the system-wide analysis of industrially relevant microorganisms, the manipulation of strains towards an economically relevant goal remains a challenge. Remarkably, our ability to catalogue the participants in and model ever more comprehensive aspects of a microorganism’s physiology is now complemented by technologies that permanently expand the scope of engineering interventions that can be imagined. In fact, genome-wide editing and re-synthesis of microbial and even eukaryotic chromosomes have become widely applied methods. At the heart of this emerging system-wide engineering approach, often labelled ’ Synthetic Biology ’ , is the continuous improvement of large-scale DNA synthesis, which is put to two-fold use: (i) starting ever more ambitious efforts to re-write existing and coding novel molecular systems, and (ii) designing and constructing increasingly sophisticated library technologies, which has led to a renaissance of directed evolution in strain engineering. Here, we briefly review some of the critical concepts and technological stepping-stones of Synthetic Biology on its way to becoming a mature industrial technology. }, number={5}, journal={CHIMIA}, author={Panke, Sven}, year={2020}, month={May}, pages={402} }