Falconieri Visuals

Synthetic Bacteria for Health 

Prev Next
Previous

CRISPR

medical illustration of Hero image depicting Synlogic's therapeutic E. coli bacteria that breaks down Phenylalanine in the digestive tracts of people with Phenylketonuria (PKU). It was also used as the cover of Science Translational Medicine.
Next medical illustration of Cells use messenger RNA (blue) to ferry copies of genes from the nucleus to ribosomes (purple), where the genes can be translated into proteins. Proteins are the machinery of the cell, and enable the cell to change its behavior.
The Oberdoerffer Lab discovered that certain modifications (shown here in green) can make the messenger RNA last longer, and ribosomes can more efficiently assemble the protein it encodes. This means more of that protein is created, which impacts cell behavior.

Supercharging RNA

Hero image depicting Synlogic's therapeutic E. coli bacteria that breaks down Phenylalanine in the digestive tracts of people with Phenylketonuria (PKU). It was also used as the cover of Science Translational Medicine.

Keywords: 3D, Advertising / Marketing, Editorial, Biotechnology, Cell biology / Histology, Molecular Biology, Mechanism of Action (MOA)

V. Falconieri Hays