Opinion | Open Access
Volume 2022 |Article ID 9794510 | https://doi.org/10.34133/2022/9794510

Hardware, Software, and Wetware Codesign Environment for Synthetic Biology

Samuel M. D. Oliveira,1,2 Douglas Densmore iD 1,2

1Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Boston University, MA 02215, USA
2Biological Design Center, Boston University, MA 02215, USA

Received 
14 Feb 2022
Accepted 
10 Aug 2022
Published
02 Sep 2022

Abstract

Synthetic biology is the process of forward engineering living systems. These systems can be used to produce biobased materials, agriculture, medicine, and energy. One approach to designing these systems is to employ techniques from the design of embedded electronics. These techniques include abstraction, standards, modularity, automated design, and formal semantic models of computation. Together, these elements form the foundation of “biodesign automation,” where software, robotics, and microfluidic devices combine to create exciting biological systems of the future. This paper describes a “hardware, software, wetware” codesign vision where software tools can be made to act as “genetic compilers” that transform high-level specifications into engineered “genetic circuits” (wetware). This is followed by a process where automation equipment, well-defined experimental workflows, and microfluidic devices are explicitly designed to house, execute, and test these circuits (hardware). These systems can be used as either massively parallel experimental platforms or distributed bioremediation and biosensing devices. Next, scheduling and control algorithms (software) manage these systems’ actual execution and data analysis tasks. A distinguishing feature of this approach is how all three of these aspects (hardware, software, and wetware) may be derived from the same basic specification in parallel and generated to fulfill specific cost, performance, and structural requirements.

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