The scope and prospect of synthetic biology is continuously
evolving and expanding (Andrianantoandro et al., 2006; Cameron
et al., 2014; Purnick and Weiss, 2009), yet fundamentally relies
on the premise that biology can be built from a collection of
well-characterized parts and subsystems. For more conventional,
model organisms (such as Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae),
this approach is aided by existing and ongoing efforts to
catalogue synthetic parts and genome editing tools (Lee et al.,
2015; Purnick and Weiss, 2009). The general tractable nature of
genetic modifications and basic molecular biology and protein