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BioMed Central, BMC Bioinformatics, S10(14), 2013

DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-14-s10-s9

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Mapping behavioral specifications to model parameters in synthetic biology

Journal article published in 2013 by Heinz Koeppl, Marc Hafner, James Lu
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

With recent improvements of protocols for the assembly of transcriptional parts, synthetic biological devices can now more reliably be assembled according to a given design. The standardization of parts open up the way for in silico design tools that improve the construct and optimize devices with respect to given formal design specifications. The simplest such optimization is the selection of kinetic parameters and protein abundances such that the specified design constraints are robustly satisfied. In this work we address the problem of determining parameter values that fulfill specifications expressed in terms of a functional on the trajectories of a dynamical model. We solve this inverse problem by linearizing the forward operator that maps parameter sets to specifications, and then inverting it locally. This approach has two advantages over brute-force random sampling. First, the linearization approach allows us to map back intervals instead of points and second, every obtained value in the parameter region is satisfying the specifications by construction. The method is general and can hence be incorporated in a pipeline for the rational forward design of arbitrary devices in synthetic biology.