Robust synthetic biology design: stochastic game theory approach

Motivation: Synthetic biology is to engineer artificial biological systems to investigate natural biological phenomena and for a variety of applications. However, the development of synthetic gene networks is still difficult and most newly created gene networks are non-functioning due to uncertain i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBioinformatics Vol. 25; no. 14; pp. 1822 - 1830
Main Authors Chen, Bor-Sen, Chang, Chia-Hung, Lee, Hsiao-Ching
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Oxford University Press 15.07.2009
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
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Summary:Motivation: Synthetic biology is to engineer artificial biological systems to investigate natural biological phenomena and for a variety of applications. However, the development of synthetic gene networks is still difficult and most newly created gene networks are non-functioning due to uncertain initial conditions and disturbances of extra-cellular environments on the host cell. At present, how to design a robust synthetic gene network to work properly under these uncertain factors is the most important topic of synthetic biology. Results: A robust regulation design is proposed for a stochastic synthetic gene network to achieve the prescribed steady states under these uncertain factors from the minimax regulation perspective. This minimax regulation design problem can be transformed to an equivalent stochastic game problem. Since it is not easy to solve the robust regulation design problem of synthetic gene networks by non-linear stochastic game method directly, the Takagi–Sugeno (T–S) fuzzy model is proposed to approximate the non-linear synthetic gene network via the linear matrix inequality (LMI) technique through the Robust Control Toolbox in Matlab. Finally, an in silico example is given to illustrate the design procedure and to confirm the efficiency and efficacy of the proposed robust gene design method. Availability: http://www.ee.nthu.edu.tw/bschen/SyntheticBioDesign_supplement.pdf Contact: bschen@ee.nthu.edu.tw Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Bibliography:istex:FDE4866E82D9CB4B7B3C62428C906CA6373BE7E5
ark:/67375/HXZ-TCWQSH9C-M
To whom correspondence should be addressed.
ArticleID:btp310
Associate Editor: Alfonso Valencia
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SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 23
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ISSN:1367-4803
1460-2059
1367-4811
DOI:10.1093/bioinformatics/btp310