Treffer: Developing complex RNA design applications in the Infrared framework

Title:
Developing complex RNA design applications in the Infrared framework
Contributors:
Algorithms and Models for Integrative BIOlogy (AMIBIO), Laboratoire d'informatique de l'École polytechnique [Palaiseau] (LIX), École polytechnique (X), Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris)-Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École polytechnique (X), Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris)-Institut Polytechnique de Paris (IP Paris)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), McGill University = Université McGill [Montréal, Canada], Universität Wien = University of Vienna, ANR-19-CE45-0023,PaRNAssus,Décrypter les architectures complexes d'ARN par sondage et interactions(2019)
Source:
RNA Folding - Methods and Protocols. :285-313
Publisher Information:
HAL CCSD; Springer US, 2024.
Publication Year:
2024
Collection:
collection:X
collection:CNRS
collection:LIX
collection:X-LIX
collection:X-DEP
collection:X-DEP-INFO
collection:IP_PARIS
collection:ANR
Original Identifier:
HAL: hal-03711828
Document Type:
Buch bookPart<br />Book sections
Language:
English
Relation:
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/doi/10.1007/978-1-0716-3519-3_12
DOI:
10.1007/978-1-0716-3519-3_12
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
Accession Number:
edshal.hal.03711828v2
Database:
HAL

Weitere Informationen

Applications in biotechnology and bio-medical research call for effective strategies to design novel RNAs with very specific properties. Such advanced design tasks require support by computational tools but at the same time put high demands on their flexibility and expressivity to model the application-specific requirements. To address such demands, we present the computational framework Infrared. It supports developing advanced customized design tools, which generate RNA sequences with specific properties, often in a few lines of Python code. This text guides the reader in tutorial format through the development of complex design applications. Thanks to the declarative, compositional approach of Infrared, we can describe this development as step-by-step extension of an elementary design task. Thus, we start with generating sequences that are compatible with a single RNA structure and go all the way to RNA design targeting complex positive and negative design objectives with respect to single or even multiple target structures. Finally, we present a ’real-world’ application of computational design to create an RNA device for biotechnology: we use Infrared to generate design candidates of an artificial ‘AND’ riboswitch, which activates gene expression in the simultaneous presence of two different small metabolites.Keywords: RNA design, multi-target design, declarative modeling, Boltzmannsampling, fixed-parameter tractable sampling