Over the last three decades, digital technologies have transformed lifestyles, livelihoods and businesses, creating new wealth, industrial sectors and opportunities. The impact of synthetic biology – which combines biology with engineering to design and create new biological systems – could be 10 times that of the technology revolution, and happen in half the time. So presages Randal J. Kirk, billionaire chairman and CEO of Intrexon Corp., one of a handful of listed companies seeking to drive – and ride – this next revolution. “This [synthetic biology] is the most important, attractive and productive industrial vector in the history of man.”
Engineering DNA, the codebook for life, isn’t new. Recombinant DNA and the creation of manufactured biologicals were the bedrock of the biotech sector in the 1980s and 1990s – what...
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