Scalable, Time-Responsive, Digital, Energy-Efficient Molecular Circuits using DNA Strand Displacement
Ehsan Chiniforooshan, David Doty, Lila Kari, Shinnosuke Seki

TL;DR
This paper introduces a scalable, time-responsive, digital, and energy-efficient DNA strand displacement design for implementing Boolean circuits, enabling large-scale, continuous, and low-energy molecular computation.
Contribution
The authors present a novel biomolecular design that allows scalable, digital, and energy-efficient DNA-based Boolean circuits capable of processing time-varying inputs.
Findings
Design is scalable with all species mixed in a single test tube.
Output concentrations respond to input variations, enabling continuous processing.
Steady-state operation is energy-efficient with ideal inputs.
Abstract
We propose a novel theoretical biomolecular design to implement any Boolean circuit using the mechanism of DNA strand displacement. The design is scalable: all species of DNA strands can in principle be mixed and prepared in a single test tube, rather than requiring separate purification of each species, which is a barrier to large-scale synthesis. The design is time-responsive: the concentration of output species changes in response to the concentration of input species, so that time-varying inputs may be continuously processed. The design is digital: Boolean values of wires in the circuit are represented as high or low concentrations of certain species, and we show how to construct a single-input, single-output signal restoration gate that amplifies the difference between high and low, which can be distributed to each wire in the circuit to overcome signal degradation. This means we…
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