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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural network computation with DNA strand displacement cascades

Lulu Qian, +2 more
- 21 Jul 2011 - 
- Vol. 475, Iss: 7356, pp 368-372
TLDR
It is suggested that DNA strand displacement cascades could be used to endow autonomous chemical systems with the capability of recognizing patterns of molecular events, making decisions and responding to the environment.
Abstract
The impressive capabilities of the mammalian brain—ranging from perception, pattern recognition and memory formation to decision making and motor activity control—have inspired their re-creation in a wide range of artificial intelligence systems for applications such as face recognition, anomaly detection, medical diagnosis and robotic vehicle control Yet before neuron-based brains evolved, complex biomolecular circuits provided individual cells with the ‘intelligent’ behaviour required for survival However, the study of how molecules can ‘think’ has not produced an equal variety of computational models and applications of artificial chemical systems Although biomolecular systems have been hypothesized to carry out neural-network-like computations in vivo and the synthesis of artificial chemical analogues has been proposed theoretically, experimental work has so far fallen short of fully implementing even a single neuron Here, building on the richness of DNA computing and strand displacement circuitry, we show how molecular systems can exhibit autonomous brain-like behaviours Using a simple DNA gate architecture that allows experimental scale-up of multilayer digital circuits, we systematically transform arbitrary linear threshold circuits (an artificial neural network model) into DNA strand displacement cascades that function as small neural networks Our approach even allows us to implement a Hopfield associative memory with four fully connected artificial neurons that, after training in silico, remembers four single-stranded DNA patterns and recalls the most similar one when presented with an incomplete pattern Our results suggest that DNA strand displacement cascades could be used to endow autonomous chemical systems with the capability of recognizing patterns of molecular events, making decisions and responding to the environment

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Artificial Molecular Machines

TL;DR: The latest generations of sophisticated synthetic molecular machine systems in which the controlled motion of subcomponents is used to perform complex tasks are discussed, paving the way to applications and the realization of a new era of “molecular nanotechnology”.
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DNA Origami: Scaffolds for Creating Higher Order Structures

TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive survey of recent developments in DNA origami structure, design, assembly, and directed self-assembly, as well as its broad applications.
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Large-scale de novo DNA synthesis: technologies and applications

TL;DR: Methods and caveats for the de novo synthesis of DNA are summarized, with particular emphasis on recent technologies that allow for large-scale and low-cost production.
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Toehold Switches: De-Novo-Designed Regulators of Gene Expression

TL;DR: A class of de-novo-designed prokaryotic riboregulators called toehold switches are reported that activate gene expression in response to cognate RNAs with arbitrary sequences that represent a versatile and powerful platform for regulation of translation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic DNA devices and assemblies formed by shape-complementary, non-base pairing 3D components.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that discrete three-dimensional DNA components can specifically self-assemble in solution on the basis of shape-complementarity and without base pairing, and may be finely controlled by global parameters such as cation concentration or temperature and by an allosteric mechanism based on strand-displacement reactions.
References
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