PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

A formalized design process for bacterial consortia that perform logic computing.

  • Weiyue Ji,
  • Handuo Shi,
  • Haoqian Zhang,
  • Rui Sun,
  • Jingyi Xi,
  • Dingqiao Wen,
  • Jingchen Feng,
  • Yiwei Chen,
  • Xiao Qin,
  • Yanrong Ma,
  • Wenhan Luo,
  • Linna Deng,
  • Hanchi Lin,
  • Ruofan Yu,
  • Qi Ouyang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0057482
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. e57482

Abstract

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The concept of microbial consortia is of great attractiveness in synthetic biology. Despite of all its benefits, however, there are still problems remaining for large-scaled multicellular gene circuits, for example, how to reliably design and distribute the circuits in microbial consortia with limited number of well-behaved genetic modules and wiring quorum-sensing molecules. To manage such problem, here we propose a formalized design process: (i) determine the basic logic units (AND, OR and NOT gates) based on mathematical and biological considerations; (ii) establish rules to search and distribute simplest logic design; (iii) assemble assigned basic logic units in each logic operating cell; and (iv) fine-tune the circuiting interface between logic operators. We in silico analyzed gene circuits with inputs ranging from two to four, comparing our method with the pre-existing ones. Results showed that this formalized design process is more feasible concerning numbers of cells required. Furthermore, as a proof of principle, an Escherichia coli consortium that performs XOR function, a typical complex computing operation, was designed. The construction and characterization of logic operators is independent of "wiring" and provides predictive information for fine-tuning. This formalized design process provides guidance for the design of microbial consortia that perform distributed biological computation.