Tuning the dials of Synthetic Biology Arpino, James A. J. and Hancock, Edward J. and Anderson, James and Barahona, Mauricio and Stan, Guy-Bart V. and Papachristodoulou, Antonis and Polizzi, Karen,, 159, 1236-1253 (2013), doi = https://doi.org/10.1099/mic.0.067975-0, publicationName = Microbiology Society, issn = 1350-0872, abstract= Synthetic Biology is the ‘Engineering of Biology’ – it aims to use a forward-engineering design cycle based on specifications, modelling, analysis, experimental implementation, testing and validation to modify natural or design new, synthetic biology systems so that they behave in a predictable fashion. Motivated by the need for truly plug-and-play synthetic biological components, we present a comprehensive review of ways in which the various parts of a biological system can be modified systematically. In particular, we review the list of ‘dials’ that are available to the designer and discuss how they can be modelled, tuned and implemented. The dials are categorized according to whether they operate at the global, transcriptional, translational or post-translational level and the resolution that they operate at. We end this review with a discussion on the relative advantages and disadvantages of some dials over others., language=, type=