| Literature DB >> 31348656 |
Jacob Beal1,2, Tramy Nguyen3, Thomas E Gorochowski4, Angel Goñi-Moreno5, James Scott-Brown6, James Alastair McLaughlin5, Curtis Madsen7, Benjamin Aleritsch8, Bryan Bartley2, Shyam Bhakta9, Mike Bissell10, Sebastian Castillo Hair9, Kevin Clancy1, Augustin Luna11, Nicolas Le Novère12, Zach Palchick13, Matthew Pocock14, Herbert Sauro15, John T Sexton9, Jeffrey J Tabor9, Christopher A Voigt16, Zach Zundel3, Chris Myers3, Anil Wipat5.
Abstract
Biological engineers often find it useful to communicate using diagrams. These diagrams can include information both about the structure of the nucleic acid sequences they are engineering and about the functional relationships between features of these sequences and/or other molecular species. A number of conventions and practices have begun to emerge within synthetic biology for creating such diagrams, and the Synthetic Biology Open Language Visual (SBOL Visual) has been developed as a standard to organize, systematize, and extend such conventions in order to produce a coherent visual language. Here, we describe SBOL Visual version 2, which expands previous diagram standards to include new functional interactions, categories of molecular species, support for families of glyph variants, and the ability to indicate modular structure and mappings between elements of a system. SBOL Visual 2 also clarifies a number of requirements and best practices, significantly expands the collection of glyphs available to describe genetic features, and can be readily applied using a wide variety of software tools, both general and bespoke.Entities:
Keywords: Synthetic Biology Open Language; diagrams; synthetic biology; visualization
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31348656 PMCID: PMC8023477 DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.9b00139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Synth Biol ISSN: 2161-5063 Impact factor: 5.110