DocumentCode :
2897134
Title :
Digital signal processing with biomolecular reactions
Author :
Jiang, Hua ; Riedel, Marc D. ; Parhi, Keshab K.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
6-8 Oct. 2010
Firstpage :
237
Lastpage :
242
Abstract :
We present a methodology for implementing digital signal processing (DSP) operations such as filtering with biomolecular reactions. From a DSP specification, we demonstrate how to synthesize biomolecular reactions that produce time-varying output quantities of molecules as a function of time-varying input quantities. Unlike all previous schemes for biomolecular computation, ours produces designs that are dependent only on coarse rate categories for the reactions (“fast” and “slow”). Given such categories, the computation is exact and independent of the specific reaction rates. We implement DSP operations through a self-timed “handshaking” protocol that transfers quantities between molecular types based on the absence of other types. Our scheme is efficient: both the number of molecular types and the number of reactions grow linearly with the size of the DSP specification. We illustrate our methodology with the design of a simple moving-average filter as well as a more complex biquad filter. We validate our designs through transient stochastic simulations of the chemical kinetics. Although conceptual for the time being, our methodology has potential applications in domains of synthetic biology such as biochemical sensing and drug delivery. We are exploring DNA-based computation via strand displacement as a possible experimental chassis.
Keywords :
DNA; biochemistry; biocomputing; biquadratic filters; molecular biophysics; moving average processes; reaction kinetics theory; signal processing; DNA-based computation; DSP; biochemical sensing; biomolecular reactions; chemical kinetics; complex biquad filter; digital signal processing; drug delivery; filtering; moving-average filter; self-timed handshaking protocol; strand displacement; time-varying input quantities; time-varying output quantities; transient stochastic simulations; Biological system modeling; Bismuth; Color; Computational modeling; Delay; Digital signal processing; Simulation; biomolecular computing; computational biology; digital signal processing; synthetic biology;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing Systems (SIPS), 2010 IEEE Workshop on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
ISSN :
1520-6130
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8932-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1520-6130
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SIPS.2010.5624796
Filename :
5624796
Link To Document :
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