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POSTECH Researchers Slash Cost of Reconstituted Cell-Free Systems by 95%

June 25, 2026
in Technology and Engineering
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In a landmark study poised to redefine the landscape of protein synthesis, Professor Joongoo Lee and his team at POSTECH have engineered an automated, modular platform that promises to revolutionize reconstituted cell-free systems. Traditionally, these systems, which enable protein production outside the confines of living cells, have been hampered by prohibitive costs and cumbersome workflows. However, this newly developed methodology slashes expenses by an astonishing 95%, enhances synthesis performance fivefold, and halves preparation time, all while introducing unprecedented flexibility to the customization of protein production processes.

Cell-free protein synthesis has long presented itself as a tantalizing alternative to cellular expression systems, circumventing the complexities inherent to living organisms. The technique can be likened to instant coffee, where all necessary components are pre-mixed, requiring only the addition of a ‘recipe’ — in this case, DNA encoding the target protein. Despite its potential, the practical application of cell-free systems has been significantly limited by high costs, significant labor demands, and variability stemming from the expertise required for manual preparation.

The breakthrough reported by the POSTECH team stems from a strategic shift in production paradigms. Instead of relying on cell lysates extracted from living organisms, they innovatively produce essential translational machinery components entirely in vitro. Employing an Escherichia coli lysate-based platform, the system synthesizes translation factors directly within the test tube environment, synchronizing this process with an automated liquid handling system. This fusion of molecular biology with robotics not only streamlines the production pipeline but also significantly reduces human error and batch-to-batch variability, ensuring a highly reproducible output.

One of the most compelling features of this new platform lies in its modular design. Unlike conventional cell-free systems that present a static mixture of components, this architecture allows researchers to include or exclude individual ingredients at will. This modularity is particularly transformative when incorporating non-canonical amino acids into peptides and proteins—a frontier that holds immense promise for the development of novel therapeutics, such as antibody-drug conjugates. By allowing precise manipulation of the synthetic machinery, the system empowers scientists to customize protein products with enhanced functionalities.

The implications for industrial biotechnology and pharmaceutical development are profound. Biofoundries—next-generation automated DNA foundries—stand to benefit immensely from such a low-cost, customizable system. Integrated with robotics and artificial intelligence, the platform facilitates rapid iteration of design-build-test cycles central to synthetic biology. Its adoption could accelerate drug discovery, enzyme engineering, and the production of bespoke biologics, potentially shortening the timeline from conception to clinical application.

Professor Lee underscores the transformative potential of this technology, emphasizing the platform’s capacity to democratize access to cell-free protein synthesis. The automated nature and cost efficiency mean a broader swath of the scientific community can now explore protein engineering without the barrier of expensive reagents or time-intensive preparation. This could catalyze innovation across diverse fields ranging from industrial biotechnology to fundamental research.

Technically, the system leverages a series of in vitro-produced translation factors, eliminating the bottlenecks associated with harvesting such components from cellular extracts. The integration with automated liquid handlers ensures precise assembly of these components, minimizing inconsistencies and enabling scalable production. Furthermore, the platform’s adaptability supports the seamless integration of non-standard amino acids, expanding the capacity for site-specific modifications and enhanced protein functionalities.

Crucially, this mechanized approach addresses one of the most pressing challenges of cell-free systems: reproducibility. By standardizing the production of each component and reducing manual interventions, the technology ensures uniformity across batches. This reproducibility is essential for downstream applications in drug development and synthetic biology where consistency is paramount.

From an economic perspective, reducing preparation time from four days to just two, coupled with a 95% reduction in costs, radically alters the practicality of deploying cell-free systems at scale. This economic shift could make cell-free protein synthesis an accessible tool for both academic labs and industrial settings, fostering innovation and expanding experimental possibilities.

Moreover, the ability to customize systems by selectively adding or omitting factors opens new avenues in protein design. Tailoring the translational machinery enables the synthesis of proteins with unique properties, including the incorporation of therapeutic moieties or enhanced stability profiles. This flexibility is especially valuable in the design of antibody-drug conjugates, where precise control over the payload attachment is critical.

The research was bolstered by substantial support from the Korean government and international collaborations, underscoring a growing global interest in advancing synthetic biology infrastructures. The utilization of the Green Bio Foundry further highlights the role of dedicated automated facilities in pushing biotechnological innovation.

In summary, the work led by Professor Joongoo Lee ushers in a new era for cell-free protein synthesis. By combining automation, modularity, and cost-effectiveness, this platform overcomes longstanding obstacles and sets the stage for a broad spectrum of applications—from fundamental research to therapeutic development. As synthetic biology continues to integrate with engineering disciplines, such innovations will be pivotal in unlocking the next generation of bioindustrial capabilities.


Subject of Research: Automated assembly of reconstituted cell-free protein synthesis systems

Article Title: Automated, modular assembly of reconstituted cell-free systems from in vitro-produced components

News Publication Date: 6-Jun-2026

Web References: DOI: 10.1016/j.tibtech.2026.05.002

Image Credits: POSTECH

Keywords

Applied sciences and engineering, Biotechnology, Molecular biology, Synthetic biology, Biophysics, Biochemical engineering, Protein engineering, Drug development, Drug discovery, Enzyme activation, Genetic methods, Genetic engineering

Tags: automated modular cell-free platformscell-free system preparation automationcost reduction in protein synthesiscustomizable protein production workflowshigh-efficiency cell-free systemsin vitro protein production technologyPOSTECH protein synthesis researchprotein synthesis without living cellsreconstituted cell-free protein synthesisscalable cell-free expression systemssynthetic biology protein manufacturingtranslational machinery in vitro production
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