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Designs on life Even if you’’re thinking big, you usually have to start small. It is especially true for a group of Swiss students who found that big means counting to infinity. The team was drawing up a blueprint for the world’’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts. Although they had their sights on loftier numbers, they opted to go no higher than two. If the plan worked, it would be a proof-of-principle for a much larger tallyingdevice(计算装置). The group, from the Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich, was one of 17 teams presenting their projects at the first international Intercollegiate Genetically Engineered Machine (IGEM) competition, held at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge on 5 and 6 November. The event attracted students from all over the world to design and build machines made entirely from biological components such as genes and proteins. They drew up grand designs for bacterial Etch-a-Sketches, photosensitive t-shirts, thermometers and sensors. And if none of the designs succeeded completely, that was more because of the limitations of the new-born science of synthetic biology than any lack of enthusiasm, creativity or hard work.Synthetic biology Synthetic biology aims to merge engineering approaches with biology. Researchers working at the most basic level are copying simple biological processes, such as the production of a protein from a gene. They break the process down into its component elements, such as a gene and the pieces of DNA and other molecules that control its activity. They then string these elements together to build a module they know will behave in a particular way ― say, oscillate between producing and not producing a protein, or produce a protein that can switch another module on or off. It is these kinds of components― oscillators (震荡器) and switches― that engineers order from suppliers and link together to build more complex electronic circuits and machines. Synthetic biologists are trying to develop a similar armoury of biological components, dubbed BioBricks, that can be inserted into any genetic circuit to carry out a particular function. Scientists at MIT have established a Registry of Standard Biological Parts, a catalogue of BioBricks that theoretically can be ordered and plugged into a cell, just as resistors and transistors can be ordered and plugged into electronic circuitry. But it is hard to find scientists who are trained and interested in both biology and engineering to fuel the development of this new science. So, like true engineers, the founding synthetic biologists are trying to build their future colleagues from the ground up. To do so, they have commandeered a time-honoured engineering tradition: the student competition. The IGEM event began life as a project class for MIT students in 2003. Last year, it was thrown open to other US universities, and this year it went international. The organizers hope to attract 30 to 50 teams next year, including some from Asia.Competitive culture Much like the robot competitions that tap into students’’ desire to build something cool, the IGEM jamborees (国际性少年大会) fire the participants’’ natural curiosity ― hopefully encouraging biologists to learn something from engineers, and vice versa. "If you want to make something in this field, you can’’t just get some glue out and stick two cells together," says Randy Rettberg of MIT, who organized the competition. "You have to learn some biology to do it, and it’’s easy to do that during the competition because you know exactly why you’’re doing it."This year, the teams presented an eclectic selection of designs. Students from the University of Cambridge, UK, tried to make a circuit that could control the movement of Escherichia coli bacteria. They aimed to engineer the bacteria to contain a switch governing their sensitivity to the sugar maltose. With the switch off, the microbes would ignore the sugar. Tripping the switch would make the bacteria sensitive to the sugar and induce them to move towards it. In the end, the group ― like almost every other entrant ― had trouble completing assembly of its genetic parts in time. Many of the other students also tackled problems related to bacterial communication and motion. The team from Pennsylvania State University designed a bacterial relay race, which it hoped would bring synthetic biology into the realm of sports ― an innovation that won it an award for the Best New Sport at the end of the competition. A team from the University of Oklahoma’’s Advanced Center for Genome Technology in Norman tried to exploit the sugar arabinose as an engine to drive bacterial motion. Teams from the University of Toronto and the University of California, San Francisco, built concepts for bacterial thermometers; and groups from Harvard, Toronto and Princeton designed bacterial illustrators and Etch-a-Sketches. Detection and sensing were also popular, with groups from Davidson College and MIT focusing in this area. And a lab at the California Institute of Technology tackled a problem raised at last year’’s event: designing biological memory. Students from the University of Texas demonstrated the world’’s first bacterial photography system. The team engineered a plate of E. coli so that they would respond to light and has since used the invention to take numerous photos, including shots of the group’’s adviser, Andrew Ellington.Piece by piece As well as helping students to bridge the divide between disciplines, the competition gave them firsthand experience of life in the lab. All hit obstacles assembling their parts into coherent devices. It is still difficult to dissect the different genetic components of the circuits, stitch them together and get them to work in live cells. As Emanuel Nazareth reported, the students all learned one hard truth: "You can never allocate enough time for assembly." This hints at a larger problem in synthetic biology. The field aims to build up a library of parts that can be interchanged in circuits with minimal effort. But that goal is not yet a reality as DNA sequencing and assembling technologies are still a bit too expensive and complex. "We’’re not organized at the community level around fabrication," says MIT’’s Drew Endy, one of the founders of the field and of the Registry of Standard Biological Parts. These difficulties need to be overcome before biological components will be as easy to deploy as their engineering counterparts. Another learning experience was the reminder that, even stripped down to its basic components, biology can be complex and unpredictable. A team from the University of California, Berkeley, for instance, tried to design an entirely new way for cells to communicate. This is a potentially important because it would enable cells to send and receive information, forming interlocking cell circuits instead of relying on simple gene circuits built in single cells. The team hoped to exploit a natural method used by bacteria to exchange genetic information. In this, two bacteria connect their respective cell walls together using a structure called a pilus(菌毛). The group managed to trigger the connection response with synthetic circuits. But the bacteria turned out to be so eager to join up that they did so in huge bunches― and once they did, it was hard to separate them. "They don’’t really conjugate one at a time," said team spokeswoman Melissa Li. "They can go, but they can’’t stop."The living end As Rettberg points out, there are a lot of sceptics. "There’’s a big question, which is: can you build simple biological systems out of interchangeable parts and make them work in living cells " he says. "We think you can, but there’’s a lot of people who think the other way and say biology is simply so complex you can’’t do it." Given these concerns, it is no surprise that researchers have decided to keep things as simple as possible. As Robin Künzler said in introducing the project: "In the beginning we talked about counting to infinity, but we thought maybe we’’d start by counting to two." Despite this narrowed scope, the students faced a formidable challenge. They designed a series of devices: the first takes in a signal, which is then passed to an event processor. This processor ― a genetic circuit ― splits the signal into two components. A third circuit does the counting and generates a read-out.A group of Swiss students designed the world’’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts. A.YB.NC.NG

Designs on life Even if you’’re thinking big, you usually have to start small. It is especially true for a group of Swiss students who found that big means counting to infinity. The team was drawing up a blueprint for the world’’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts. Although they had their sights on loftier numbers, they opted to go no higher than two. If the plan worked, it would be a proof-of-principle for a much larger tallyingdevice(计算装置). The group, from the Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich, was one of 17 teams presenting their projects at the first international Intercollegiate Genetically Engineered Machine (IGEM) competition, held at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge on 5 and 6 November. The event attracted students from all over the world to design and build machines made entirely from biological components such as genes and proteins. They drew up grand designs for bacterial Etch-a-Sketches, photosensitive t-shirts, thermometers and sensors. And if none of the designs succeeded completely, that was more because of the limitations of the new-born science of synthetic biology than any lack of enthusiasm, creativity or hard work.Synthetic biology Synthetic biology aims to merge engineering approaches with biology. Researchers working at the most basic level are copying simple biological processes, such as the production of a protein from a gene. They break the process down into its component elements, such as a gene and the pieces of DNA and other molecules that control its activity. They then string these elements together to build a module they know will behave in a particular way ― say, oscillate between producing and not producing a protein, or produce a protein that can switch another module on or off. It is these kinds of components― oscillators (震荡器) and switches― that engineers order from suppliers and link together to build more complex electronic circuits and machines. Synthetic biologists are trying to develop a similar armoury of biological components, dubbed BioBricks, that can be inserted into any genetic circuit to carry out a particular function. Scientists at MIT have established a Registry of Standard Biological Parts, a catalogue of BioBricks that theoretically can be ordered and plugged into a cell, just as resistors and transistors can be ordered and plugged into electronic circuitry. But it is hard to find scientists who are trained and interested in both biology and engineering to fuel the development of this new science. So, like true engineers, the founding synthetic biologists are trying to build their future colleagues from the ground up. To do so, they have commandeered a time-honoured engineering tradition: the student competition. The IGEM event began life as a project class for MIT students in 2003. Last year, it was thrown open to other US universities, and this year it went international. The organizers hope to attract 30 to 50 teams next year, including some from Asia.Competitive culture Much like the robot competitions that tap into students’’ desire to build something cool, the IGEM jamborees (国际性少年大会) fire the participants’’ natural curiosity ― hopefully encouraging biologists to learn something from engineers, and vice versa. "If you want to make something in this field, you can’’t just get some glue out and stick two cells together," says Randy Rettberg of MIT, who organized the competition. "You have to learn some biology to do it, and it’’s easy to do that during the competition because you know exactly why you’’re doing it."This year, the teams presented an eclectic selection of designs. Students from the University of Cambridge, UK, tried to make a circuit that could control the movement of Escherichia coli bacteria. They aimed to engineer the bacteria to contain a switch governing their sensitivity to the sugar maltose. With the switch off, the microbes would ignore the sugar. Tripping the switch would make the bacteria sensitive to the sugar and induce them to move towards it. In the end, the group ― like almost every other entrant ― had trouble completing assembly of its genetic parts in time. Many of the other students also tackled problems related to bacterial communication and motion. The team from Pennsylvania State University designed a bacterial relay race, which it hoped would bring synthetic biology into the realm of sports ― an innovation that won it an award for the Best New Sport at the end of the competition. A team from the University of Oklahoma’’s Advanced Center for Genome Technology in Norman tried to exploit the sugar arabinose as an engine to drive bacterial motion. Teams from the University of Toronto and the University of California, San Francisco, built concepts for bacterial thermometers; and groups from Harvard, Toronto and Princeton designed bacterial illustrators and Etch-a-Sketches. Detection and sensing were also popular, with groups from Davidson College and MIT focusing in this area. And a lab at the California Institute of Technology tackled a problem raised at last year’’s event: designing biological memory. Students from the University of Texas demonstrated the world’’s first bacterial photography system. The team engineered a plate of E. coli so that they would respond to light and has since used the invention to take numerous photos, including shots of the group’’s adviser, Andrew Ellington.Piece by piece As well as helping students to bridge the divide between disciplines, the competition gave them firsthand experience of life in the lab. All hit obstacles assembling their parts into coherent devices. It is still difficult to dissect the different genetic components of the circuits, stitch them together and get them to work in live cells. As Emanuel Nazareth reported, the students all learned one hard truth: "You can never allocate enough time for assembly." This hints at a larger problem in synthetic biology. The field aims to build up a library of parts that can be interchanged in circuits with minimal effort. But that goal is not yet a reality as DNA sequencing and assembling technologies are still a bit too expensive and complex. "We’’re not organized at the community level around fabrication," says MIT’’s Drew Endy, one of the founders of the field and of the Registry of Standard Biological Parts. These difficulties need to be overcome before biological components will be as easy to deploy as their engineering counterparts. Another learning experience was the reminder that, even stripped down to its basic components, biology can be complex and unpredictable. A team from the University of California, Berkeley, for instance, tried to design an entirely new way for cells to communicate. This is a potentially important because it would enable cells to send and receive information, forming interlocking cell circuits instead of relying on simple gene circuits built in single cells. The team hoped to exploit a natural method used by bacteria to exchange genetic information. In this, two bacteria connect their respective cell walls together using a structure called a pilus(菌毛). The group managed to trigger the connection response with synthetic circuits. But the bacteria turned out to be so eager to join up that they did so in huge bunches― and once they did, it was hard to separate them. "They don’’t really conjugate one at a time," said team spokeswoman Melissa Li. "They can go, but they can’’t stop."The living end As Rettberg points out, there are a lot of sceptics. "There’’s a big question, which is: can you build simple biological systems out of interchangeable parts and make them work in living cells " he says. "We think you can, but there’’s a lot of people who think the other way and say biology is simply so complex you can’’t do it." Given these concerns, it is no surprise that researchers have decided to keep things as simple as possible. As Robin Künzler said in introducing the project: "In the beginning we talked about counting to infinity, but we thought maybe we’’d start by counting to two." Despite this narrowed scope, the students faced a formidable challenge. They designed a series of devices: the first takes in a signal, which is then passed to an event processor. This processor ― a genetic circuit ― splits the signal into two components. A third circuit does the counting and generates a read-out.A group of Swiss students designed the world’’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts. A.YB.NC.NG

题目解答

答案

A

解析

考查要点:本题主要考查学生对文章细节信息的准确捕捉能力,需要判断题目描述是否与原文一致。

解题核心思路:

  1. 定位关键信息:题目中的“瑞士学生设计的世界上第一个完全由生物部件制成的计数机”是核心,需在原文中找到对应段落。
  2. 比对细节:确认文章是否明确提到“瑞士学生”“第一个”“完全由生物部件”三个要素。
  3. 排除干扰:注意原文中是否可能存在类似表述但细节不同的描述(如是否“完全”生物部件、是否“第一个”等)。

破题关键点:

  • 第一段明确提到:瑞士团队设计的计数机是“world’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts”,与题目描述完全一致。
  • 排除干扰项:文章未提及“完全由生物部件”存在例外或未实现的情况,因此无需考虑“NG”选项。

关键信息定位:
文章首段直接指出:

The team was drawing up a blueprint for the world’s first counting machine made entirely of biological parts.
(该团队正在设计世界上第一个完全由生物部件制成的计数机。)
The group, from the Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zurich, was one of 17 teams...
(该团队来自苏黎世联邦理工学院,是17支参赛队伍之一。)

比对题目描述:

  • 瑞士学生:原文明确提到“Swiss students”来自苏黎世联邦理工学院。
  • 第一个:原文用“world’s first”强调开创性。
  • 完全由生物部件:原文用“entirely of biological parts”说明材料特性。

结论:题目描述与原文完全一致,答案为A(Y)。

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