Week 1 HW: Principles and Practices

Homework 1: Governance & Ethics

1. Biological Engineering Application

Project: Recombinant production of BmK CT (Scorpion Peptide) via Cloud-Lab Automation. Why: Venom-derived therapeutics are currently difficult to source sustainably. My goal is to engineer a microbial “cell factory” using E. coli to produce high-purity BmK CT for glioma (brain cancer) research, utilizing automated cloud-lab infrastructure for scalable access.

2. Governance/Policy Goals

My primary goal is to ensure Non-malfeasance (preventing harm) while promoting Constructive Use.

  • Sub-goal A (Biosecurity): Preventing the diversion of synthesized neurotoxin sequences for harmful, non-therapeutic purposes.
  • Sub-goal B (Equity): Ensuring that the digital blueprints and production protocols are accessible to researchers in developing regions like Pakistan to promote autonomy.

3. Governance Actions Matrix

AspectAction 1: Automated ScreeningAction 2: User VerificationAction 3: Ethical Peer-Review
ActorDNA Synthesis CompaniesCloud Lab PlatformsAcademic Communities
PurposeFlags regulated toxin sequences.Mandatory ID for remote users.Standardizing “Dual-Use” data sharing.
AssumptionsAll toxins are indexed.Affiliation equals ethics.Users will follow protocols.
RisksFalse positives slow research.Excludes independent scientists.Security breaches are possible.

4. Scoring Matrix

(1 = Best, 3 = Least)

Does the option:Option 1Option 2Option 3
Enhance Biosecurity112
Foster Lab Safety213
Not Impede Research231
Promote Constructive App111

5. Prioritization & Recommendation

I prioritize a combination of Action 1 and Action 2. This recommendation is intended for International Regulatory Bodies. We must implement “Know Your Customer” (KYC) rigor for Cloud Labs, similar to financial institutions. While this adds a burden to remote researchers, it is a necessary trade-off for handling potent neurotoxins safely.

6. Ethical Reflection

The concept of an “Information Hazard” was a significant new concern for me. Even if my physical lab work is safe, publishing a “perfect roadmap” for toxin production could be misused. I propose “Ethical Red-Teaming” as a governance action where students peer-review project documentation for potential dual-use risks before publication.


Week 2 Pre-Lecture Preparation

In preparation for “DNA Read, Write, and Edit” lecture.

Part 1: Questions from Professor Jacobson

  • What is the error rate of polymerase? The error rate of DNA polymerase is approximately $10^{-7}$ to $10^{-8}$ per base pair.
  • How does this compare to the length of the human genome? The human genome is about 3 billion ($3 \times 10^9$) base pairs long, meaning mutations are inevitable without repair.
  • How does biology deal with that discrepancy? Biology utilizes Proofreading and Mismatch Repair (MMR) systems to reduce the final error rate to $10^{-9}$ or $10^{-10}$.
  • How many different ways are there to code for an average human protein? Due to Codon Degeneracy, there are millions of potential DNA sequences for a single protein.
  • Why don’t all of these different codes work? Factors like Codon Usage Bias, mRNA secondary structures, and cryptic splice sites can hinder protein expression.

Part 2: Questions from Dr. LeProust

  • Most common method for oligo synthesis: The Phosphoramidite method is the current standard.
  • Why is it difficult to make oligos > 200nt? Cumulative coupling inefficiencies lead to extremely low yields for long, pure sequences.
  • Why can’t you make a 2000bp gene via direct synthesis? The error rate and yield drop make direct synthesis of long genes unfeasible; they must be assembled from shorter oligos.

Part 3: Question from George Church

  • 10 Essential Amino Acids: Arginine, Histidine, Isoleucine, Leucine, Lysine, Methionine, Phenylalanine, Threonine, Tryptophan, and Valine.
  • The “Lysine Contingency”: This is a Biocontainment strategy where organisms are engineered to depend on external amino acids to prevent survival outside the lab environment.