Literature DB >> 27325906

Modular verification of chemical reaction network encodings via serializability analysis.

Matthew R Lakin1, Darko Stefanovic2, Andrew Phillips3.   

Abstract

Chemical reaction networks are a powerful means of specifying the intended behaviour of synthetic biochemical systems. A high-level formal specification, expressed as a chemical reaction network, may be compiled into a lower-level encoding, which can be directly implemented in wet chemistry and may itself be expressed as a chemical reaction network. Here we present conditions under which a lower-level encoding correctly emulates the sequential dynamics of a high-level chemical reaction network. We require that encodings are transactional, such that their execution is divided by a "commit reaction" that irreversibly separates the reactant-consuming phase of the encoding from the product-generating phase. We also impose restrictions on the sharing of species between reaction encodings, based on a notion of "extra tolerance", which defines species that may be shared between encodings without enabling unwanted reactions. Our notion of correctness is serializability of interleaved reaction encodings, and if all reaction encodings satisfy our correctness properties then we can infer that the global dynamics of the system are correct. This allows us to infer correctness of any system constructed using verified encodings. As an example, we show how this approach may be used to verify two- and four-domain DNA strand displacement encodings of chemical reaction networks, and we generalize our result to the limit where the populations of helper species are unlimited.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chemical reaction networks; DNA strand displacement; Modular verification; Serializability

Year:  2016        PMID: 27325906      PMCID: PMC4911709          DOI: 10.1016/j.tcs.2015.06.033

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Comput Sci        ISSN: 0304-3975            Impact factor:   0.827


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