| About
Biological Engineering
Advances in basic biology at the molecular and cellular levels
during recent decades have dramatically increased the
foundational information available on mechanistic underpinnings
of biological systems. Indeed, the genomics revolution has
accelerated the pace at which reductionist data is being generated.
It is widely agreed that a crucial challenge for the coming
decades is how to integrate information from the genomic level
to higher levels of system organization, for both fundamental
scientific understanding and development of innovative biotechnologies.
Engineering disciplines are predicated on the complementary
principles of analysis and synthesis, combining to elucidate
quantitative "design
principles" for the dependence of system behavior on component
properties. The "measurement, modeling, and manipulation" approach
that has characterized engineering disciplines based
on the sciences of physics and chemistry is now finding the
molecular and cellular life sciences accessible and amenable
as well. Thus, a new discipline of biological engineering is
emerging, directed toward analysis of biological systems in
terms of key component properties and consequently toward synthesis
of technologies that can beneficially modify and control
such systems for societal benefit across many, diverse application
areas including human and environmental health.
|