Treffer: A Coupled Reconfiguration Mechanism That Enables Powerful, Pseudoknot-Robust DNA Strand Displacement Devices with 2-Stranded Inputs

Title:
A Coupled Reconfiguration Mechanism That Enables Powerful, Pseudoknot-Robust DNA Strand Displacement Devices with 2-Stranded Inputs
Contributors:
Hope Amber Johnson and Anne Condon
Publisher Information:
Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik
Publication Year:
2025
Collection:
DROPS - Dagstuhl Research Online Publication Server (Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz Center for Informatics )
Document Type:
Fachzeitschrift article in journal/newspaper<br />conference object
File Description:
application/pdf
Language:
English
Relation:
Is Part Of LIPIcs, Volume 347, 31st International Conference on DNA Computing and Molecular Programming (DNA 31) (2025); https://drops.dagstuhl.de/entities/document/10.4230/LIPIcs.DNA.31.2
DOI:
10.4230/LIPIcs.DNA.31.2
Accession Number:
edsbas.F748CF9
Database:
BASE

Weitere Informationen

DNA strand displacement, a collective name for certain behaviors of short strands of DNA, has been used to build many interesting molecular devices over the past few decades. Among those devices are general implementation schemes for Chemical Reaction Networks, suggesting a place in an abstraction hierarchy for complex molecular programming. However, the possibilities of DNA strand displacement are far from fully explored. On a theoretical level, most DNA strand displacement systems are built out of a few simple motifs, with the space of possible motifs otherwise unexplored. On a practical level, the desire for general, large-scale DNA strand displacement systems is not fulfilled. Those systems that are scalable are not general, and those that are general don't scale up well. We have recently been exploring the space of possibilities for DNA strand displacement systems where all input complexes are made out of at most two strands of DNA. As a test case, we've had an open question of whether such systems can implement general Chemical Reaction Networks, in a way that has a certain set of other desirable properties - reversible, systematic, O(1) toeholds, bimolecular reactions, and correct according to CRN bisimulation - that the state-of-the-art implementations with more than 2-stranded inputs have. Until now we've had a few results that have all but one of those desirable properties, including one based on a novel mechanism we called coupled reconfiguration, but that depended on the physically questionable assumption that pseudoknots cannot occur. We wondered whether the same type of mechanism could be done in a pseudoknot-robust way. In this work we show that in fact, coupled reconfiguration can be done in a pseudoknot-robust way, and this mechanism can implement general Chemical Reaction Networks with all inputs being single strands of DNA. Going further, the same motifs used in this mechanism can implement stacks and surface-based bimolecular reactions. Those have been previously studied as part of polymer ...