Homework
Weekly homework submissions:
Project Proposal: Regulatory and follow-up procedures for Logic-Gated CAR-NK in the USA.
Project Proposal: Regulatory and follow-up procedures for Logic-Gated CAR-NK in the USA.
Project Proposal: Regulatory & Ethical Frameworks (2026)
Project Curiosity: I am interested in the development of Logic-Gated CAR-NK cells specifically for solid tumors. While CAR-T therapies have revolutionized the treatment of hematological cancer, they struggle in solid tumors due to the hostile tumor microenvironment, antigen heterogeneity, and manufacturing complexities.
Using Boolean Logic Gates (such as AND, OR, and NOT gates):
Core Goal: Ensure safety and accessibility in the deployment of advanced cellular therapies.
Prevent the On-Target, Off-Tumor Toxicity: A primary risk in solid tumor therapy is the attack of healthy organs that express low levels of the target antigen. Governance must ensure that logic gates engineered into these cells function reliably to distinguish malignant cells from healthy tissues, preventing lethal adverse effects.
Democratize Access via Scalable Manufacturing: Current autologous CAR-T treatments are highly expensive due to the bespoke manufacturing. A key policy goal is to establish regulatory frameworks that support scalable, allogeneic manufacturing models. This ensures these treatments are accessible to a broader population, not just those at elite medical centers.
Purpose: Current testing for CAR-T occurs in idealized laboratory conditions that do not reflect the complex, suppressive tumor microenvironment of a solid tumor. We must implement a regulatory “stress testing” logic gated under stimulated Tumor Microenvironment Conditions (e.g., hypoxia, high antigen density) before human trials.
Purpose: Gene therapies carry long-term risks, such as insertional mutagenesis or unexpected survival or engineered cells. We propose a mandatory, centralized patient registry designed to track and monitor requirements enforced by regulatory agencies like the FDA.
| Option | Enhance Biosecurity | Foster Lab Safety | Feasibility & Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Option 1 (Strict) | • Prevent Incidents: 3 • Help Respond: 3 | • Prevent Incident: 2 • Help Respond: 2 | • Min Burden: 3 • Feasibility: 2 • Constructive App: 2 |
| Option 2 (Market) | • Prevent Incidents: 2 • Help Respond: 2 | • Prevent Incident: 2 • Help Respond: 3 | • Min Burden: 2 • Feasibility: 3 • Constructive App: 1 |
| Option 3 (Hybrid) | • Prevent Incidents: 3 • Help Respond: 3 | • Prevent Incident: N/A • Help Respond: N/A | • Min Burden: 3 • Feasibility: 2 • Constructive App: 2 |
Nature’s machinery for copying DNA is called polymerase. What is the error rate of polymerase? How does this compare to the length of the human genome. How does biology deal with that discrepancy?
Answer: Polymerase error rate is approximately 1 error per 10^6 bases, alongside of 3′→5′ mismatch repair drives the final mutation rate down to roughly 10-8 to 10-9 per bp per replication.
Human genome size: 3.2 Gbp for human. If fidelity were only 10-6, we would expect errors per genome copy = 3.2 × 109 × 10^-6 ≈ 3,200 errors.
How many ways are there to code (DNA nucleotide code) for an average human protein? In practice what are some of the reasons that all of these different codes don’t work to code for the protein of interest?
Answer: Average human protein coding length ~ 1036 bp (~345 aa). Because of codon degeneracy, roughly (61/20)345 ≈ 1016 possible synonymous coding sequences.
They will not work for:
- Sequence features (restriction sites, repeats)
- Problematic GC% secondary structure
- Synthesis/assembly failure models
What’s the most commonly used method for oligo synthesis currently?
Answer: Solid-phase phosphoramidite synthesis (cyclic detritylation / coupling / capping / oxidation).
Why is it difficult to make oligos longer than 200nt via direct synthesis?
Answer: Each base addition is <100% efficient, so full-length yield drops exponentially with length. At 200 nt, even tiny per-step losses become huge.
More cycles also mean more side reactions + truncations, making purification of true full-length products increasingly painful.
What are the 10 essential amino acids in all animals and how does this affect your view of the “Lysine Contingency”?
Answer: Common “10 essential” set used for many non-ruminant mammals (incl. pigs): Lys, Met, Trp, Thr, Val, Ile, Leu, Arg, His, Phe.
It’s a weak containment idea for animals because lysine is already essential, so removing lysine synthesis doesn’t uniquely constrain survival (since they already need to eat it to survive).