Horizon Europe (2021 - 2027)

Evolutionary Cellular Computing for Environmental Synthetic Biology: ECCO

Last update: Feb 6, 2023 Last update: Feb 6, 2023

Details

Locations:Spain
Start Date:Oct 1, 2022
End Date:Sep 30, 2027
Contract value: EUR 2,131,809
Sectors:Environment & NRM, Research, Science & Innovation
Environment & NRM, Research, Science & Innovation
Categories:Grants
Date posted:Feb 6, 2023

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC)

Topic(s): ERC-2021-COG - ERC CONSOLIDATOR GRANTS

Call for proposal: ERC-2021-COG

Funding Scheme: HORIZON-AG - HORIZON Action Grant Budget-Based

Grant agreement ID: 101044360

Objective:
This project will build living evolutionary cellular computers, and showcase them as intelligent bioremediation agents. Current synthetic genetic networks that perform human-defined computations must remain unchanged—as initially designed—in order to perform well. This is a problem, since biological substrate adapts and evolves, compromising durability, robustness, and computing power. We will exploit the intrinsic dynamic features of living systems. ECCO’s biocomputers will be able self-adapt and reconfigure at run-time. They will show unprecedented levels of robustness and efficiency—far beyond current technological limits. To this end, we will tackle intra-cellular evolvability and multi-cellular reconfigurability. At the intra-cellular level, we will upgrade current genetic circuitry with pre-defined mutation, evaluation and selection dynamics. Circuits will optimise themselves. At the multi-cellular level, we will design cellular consortia able to reconfigure its structure—therefore changing its functionality—according to environmental needs, thus adaptive. The ECCO project will integrate theoretical developments with in-vivo experimentation. The soil bacteria Pseudomonas putida will be used as a host to illustrate the capabilities of evolutionary genetic circuits. To demonstrate long-run efficiency, bacteria will be used to colonize the root of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana—a much more complex environment than the pristine laboratory conditions where circuits are often characterized. Reconfigurability will be achieved by building a multicellular computer able to switch between metal and aromatic removal circuits—two important pollutants. Evolution, adaptation and reconfigurability are elusive to conventional computers; conveniently, these are intrinsic properties of living organisms. The ECCO will benefit from this in order to engineer living computers that unlock applications in novel domains—from synthetic agriculture to precision bioremediation.

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