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Innovation in synthetic biology often still depends on large-scale experimental trial-and-error, domain expertise, and ingenuity. The application of rational design engineering methods promise to make this more efficient, faster, cheaper and safer. But this requires mathematical models of cellular systems. And for these models we then have to determine if they can meet our intended target behaviour. Here we develop two complementary approaches that allow us to determine whether a given molecular circuit, represented by a mathematical model, is capable of fulfilling our design objectives. We discuss algebraic methods that are capable of identifying general principles guaranteeing desired behaviour; and we provide an overview over Bayesian design approaches that allow us to choose from a set of models, that model which has the highest probability of fulfilling our design objectives. We discuss their uses in the context of biochemical adaptation, and then consider how robustness can and should affect our design approach.
Synthetic biology brings together concepts and techniques from engineering and biology. In this field, computer-aided design (CAD) is necessary in order to bridge the gap between computational modeling and biological data. An application named Tinker
Here we introduce a new design framework for synthetic biology that exploits the advantages of Bayesian model selection. We will argue that the difference between inference and design is that in the former we try to reconstruct the system that has gi
Migrating cells possess intracellular gradients of Rho GTPases, but it is unknown whether these shallow gradients themselves can induce motility. Here we describe a new method to present cells with induced linear gradients of active, endogenous Rac w
Though it goes without saying that linear algebra is fundamental to mathematical biology, polynomial algebra is less visible. In this article, we will give a brief tour of four diverse biological problems where multivariate polynomials play a central
Synthetic biology aims at designing modular genetic circuits that can be assembled according to the desired function. When embedded in a cell, a circuit module becomes a small subnetwork within a larger environmental network, and its dynamics is ther