Team:Berkeley Software/Eugene

From 2009.igem.org

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<font size="4">W</font>ith the rise of partification in synthetic biology, there needs to be a formal specification to describe standard biological parts, especially when designing complex devices. The specification needs to be both human-writable and human-readable, a language that raises the level of abstraction where bioengineers can work. Eugene is such a language. Engineering at the part level requires both flexibility and rigidity. Eugene allows the user to mix custom parts with predefined parts from established databases. Parts can encapsulate an arbitrary amount of information, anything from a DNA sequence to experimental history. When designing a device in Eugene, parts can be freely stitched together on a whim, or strictly joined together based on rules. The design process is meant to be systematic yet intuitive. The user considers what information parts include, constructs parts to be used in the design, enforces restrictions on how parts can interact, and creates devices that are composites of the parts or other devices. Being a textual design, a device specified in Eugene is portable and easily lends itself to being translated into other formats, such as XML. In synthetic biology, the notion of part changes regularly and is debated tirelessly. Thus, Eugene tries to be adaptable and expressive in any climate. This page goes into the language specification in detail.<br><br>
<font size="4">W</font>ith the rise of partification in synthetic biology, there needs to be a formal specification to describe standard biological parts, especially when designing complex devices. The specification needs to be both human-writable and human-readable, a language that raises the level of abstraction where bioengineers can work. Eugene is such a language. Engineering at the part level requires both flexibility and rigidity. Eugene allows the user to mix custom parts with predefined parts from established databases. Parts can encapsulate an arbitrary amount of information, anything from a DNA sequence to experimental history. When designing a device in Eugene, parts can be freely stitched together on a whim, or strictly joined together based on rules. The design process is meant to be systematic yet intuitive. The user considers what information parts include, constructs parts to be used in the design, enforces restrictions on how parts can interact, and creates devices that are composites of the parts or other devices. Being a textual design, a device specified in Eugene is portable and easily lends itself to being translated into other formats, such as XML. In synthetic biology, the notion of part changes regularly and is debated tirelessly. Thus, Eugene tries to be adaptable and expressive in any climate. This page goes into the language specification in detail.<br><br>
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__TOC__
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<table align=left frame="box">
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<tr>
 +
<th>'''<span id="contentMenu">Contents</span>'''</th>
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</tr>
 +
<tr><td>[[#Introduction|1. Introduction]]</td></tr>
 +
<tr><td>[[#Language_Definition|2. Language Definition]]</td></tr>
 +
<tr><td>[[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene_Examples|3. Examples]]</td></tr>
 +
<tr><td>[[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene_Implementation|4. Implementation]]</td></tr>
 +
<tr><td>[[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene_Results|5. Results]]</td></tr>
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</table>
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The inclusion of header files allows the use of predefined Properties, Parts and Part Instances in the program. The manageability of code in the main file is more efficient by hiding the low level implementation of sequence and Parts. The user needs only to define Devices in the main file. On such a level the program can be written quickly and it is less error prone. Also, this allows each lab to have their own header file libraries. At the same time the option to change or declare other Properties, Parts and Part instances exists in the language.<br><br>
The inclusion of header files allows the use of predefined Properties, Parts and Part Instances in the program. The manageability of code in the main file is more efficient by hiding the low level implementation of sequence and Parts. The user needs only to define Devices in the main file. On such a level the program can be written quickly and it is less error prone. Also, this allows each lab to have their own header file libraries. At the same time the option to change or declare other Properties, Parts and Part instances exists in the language.<br><br>
<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
-
 
-
-----
 
-
<span id="Examples"><H3>Examples</H3></span>
 
-
Several Device constructs have been selected from the Registry of [http://partsregistry.org/ Standard Biological Parts] to show the creation of visual and textual designs. The visual representation has been implemented using [http://openwetware.org/wiki/Endy:Notebook/BioBrick_Open_Graphical_Language Visual BioBrick Open Language symbols] and [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Spectacles|Spectacles]], a visual tool editor, while Eugene was employed to demonstrate a textual representation. Due to the one to one relationship between standard biological parts and the Eugene syntax, the conversion could easily be achieved in both directions.<br><br>
 
-
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112809 BBa_K112809] is T4 Lysis Device with Pbad as the inducible Promoter. The Lysis device allows for the easy release of any product produced in the cell. The main file in Figure 3b displays the construct as an ordered list of Parts, while the header files are imported to hide the details of the Part declarations. With only one line of declaration, a complicated Device construct can be reproduced while the detailed information can still be accessed.<br><br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 3a: Visual representation of BBa_K112809'''</p>
 
-
[[Image:Spectacles_screenshot_BBa_K112809.jpg|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 3b: Textual representation of BBa_K112809'''</p>
 
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[[Image:BBa_K112809Picture.png|900px|center]]<br><br>
 
-
 
-
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_E7104 BBa_E7104] is a GFP Reporter Device. Again, each new Device can be created using very few lines of code as Figure 4 demonstrates.<br><br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 4a: Visual representation of BBa_E7104'''</p>
 
-
[[Image:Spectacles_screenshot_BBa_E7104.jpg|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 4b: Textual representation of BBa_E7104'''</p>
 
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[[Image:BBa_E7104Picture.png | center]]<br><br>
 
-
 
-
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K118021 BBa_K118021] in Figure 5a is a Promoter characterization Device. The second Part in [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K118021  BBa_K118021] is a Reporter as specified by the [http://partsregistry.org/ Standard Registry of Parts]. It has no image associated, since technically speaking [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_J33204 BBa_J33204] is a Device. However, currently with the available standards and specifications, there does not exist a way of breaking this Device cleanly into separate existing Parts. For example, there needs to be a way of specifying point mutation, which could be a feature of Devices, currently not supported by Eugene but is considered for future releases. Therefore, [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K118021 BBa_K118021] was specified as the Part Reporter rather than Device in the code.<br><br>
 
-
 
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<p align="center">'''Figure 5a: Visual representation of BBa_K118021'''</p>
 
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[[Image:Spectacles_screenshot_BBa_K118021.jpg|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 5b: Textual representation of BBa_K118021'''</p>
 
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[[Image:BBa_K118021Picture.png|center]]<br><br>
 
-
 
-
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_I8510 BBa_I8510] in Figure 6a is an Inverter that takes 3OC6HSL as input and produces lacZalpha as output. It also creates an orthogonal GFP protein generator.<br><br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 6a: Visual representation of BBa_I8510'''</p>
 
-
[[Image:Spectacles_screenshot_BBa_I8510.jpg|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 6b: Textual representation of BBa_I8510'''</p>
 
-
[[Image:BBa_I8510Picture.png|center]]<br><br>
 
-
 
-
<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
 
-
-----
 
-
<span id="Implementation"><H3>Implementation</H3></span>
 
-
[[Image:Eugene_Overview.jpg|900px|thumb|center|<p style="text-align: center;"><font size = "2"><span style="font-family: Georgia, serif;">Figure 1: Eugene Flow Diagram</span></font></p>]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<b><font size="3">Header File Creation</font></b><br>
 
-
Header files give the language the functionality to access many already predefined Parts in the databases. For the purpose of convenient data exchange over the Internet, XML could be used to read information from a database. Then the data is converted into Eugene syntax to represent the header files. As a result the language definitions are not just abstract statements but are tied to existing designs. There are three main header files: PropertyDefintion.h, PartDefiniton.h and PartDeclaration.h shown in Figure 1.<br>
 
-
<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
 
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<b><font size="3">Eugene Main File</font></b><br>
 
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This is the file that will specify the design expressed in Eugene syntax. The main .eug file can include the header files, which need to be specified at the top:
 
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<pre>
 
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include PropertyDefintion.h, PartDefinition.h, PartDeclaration.h;
 
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</pre>
 
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The main file will generally consist of custom [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Part_Definition Part | Part definitions]]/[[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Part_Declaration |declarations]], [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Devices| device constructs]], [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Rules | rule implementations]] and [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#ConditionalSt| control statements]].<br>
 
-
<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
 
-
 
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<b><font size="3">Eugene Compiler</font></b><br>
 
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The Eugene Compiler was created using [http://www.antlr.org ANTLR], which is a LL(*) recursive-descent parser generator that accepts lexer, parser, and tree grammars. [http://www.antlr.org ANTLR] is used as the parser generator for Eugene code, since it allows the reuse of grammar with different semantic actions and the creation of parsers in another language, which can be useful in implementing Eugene with other tools.. The grammar for Eugene eugene.g is taken as input by [http://www.antlr.org ANTLR] to create a Eugene parser and lexer file. The Eugene parser internally establishes a Backend Data Model to be used further by the Eugene Exporter. At the same time, when inputing a design in Eugene language, a data structure is created after some preprocessing of the header files. This can be applied either directly to [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Spectacles|Spectacles]], or to other visual tools after conversion to XML from our internal [[#Data_Structure|Data Structure]].<br><br>
 
-
 
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<b><font size="3"><span id="Data_Structure">Data Structure</span></font></b><br>
 
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The data structure consists of four main [[#Classes|classes]], which directly relate to the Eugene syntax. Each instance of these classes is referenced by the user-defined name from the Eugene files and stored in global hash maps according to the class type. <br><br>
 
-
 
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<span id="Classes"><font size="3">''Classes''</font><br></span>
 
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#The Primitive class acts as a container for numbers, text, lists and boolean values. <br>
 
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#The Part class stores the instance of a Part and its Property values as a Hash map of Property labels referencing Primitive data types. Each Part instance will point towards the Part definition it came from through its type field. An image path can be bound to a Part where Part instances can have different images if the user specifies accordingly.<br>
 
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#The Device class stores the instance of a Device and the names of the ordered list of components. An image path can also be associated with a specific instance. <br>
 
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#The Rule class stores the instance of a Rule definition, where the rule statement is broken into three components: the left and right operand and the operator. <br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 1: Class Organization for Eugene'''</p>
 
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[[Image:DataModel_classes.png|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
<span id="Global_Data_Structure"><font size="3">''Global Data Structure''</font><br></span>
 
-
The data structure is divided between the storage of Part and Property definitions and the actual instances corresponding to their classes for efficient and immediate access to the data. Every instance is referenced by name and stored in a hash map according to the class it belongs. Parts, Devices, rules and primitives are kept in separate hash maps.<br>
 
-
The hash map propertyDefinitions stores the defined Property labels and their type. For instance the sequence property will be of type txt as shown in Figure 2. The hash map partDefinitions stores the defined Parts and the property labels as well as any image associated with the specific Part. For example the Part Promoter will have the properties ID, Sequence and Orientation.<br>
 
-
 
-
<p align="center">'''Figure 2: Populating Global Data Structures with Property and Part Definitions'''</p>
 
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[[Image:ExamplePropertyPart_defs.png|850px|center]]<br>
 
-
 
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The hash map partDeclarations contains the declared Part instances. Each instance contains a list of Property values. For example, the Part instance BBa_I0500 is of type Promoter having the properties ID, Sequence and Orientation where Sequence is of type “txt” and has “GATCTtta…” as its value as shown in Figure 3. Similarly, deviceDeclarations, ruleDeclarations and primitiveDeclarations store the instance names referring to class instances of Device, Rule and Primitive respectively. 
 
-
 
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<p align="center">'''Figure 3: Populating Global Data Structures with Primitive, Part, and Device Declarations '''</p>
 
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[[Image:PrimsPartsDevicesExamples_decs.png|850px|center]]<br>
 
-
 
-
The hash maps ruleAsssertions and ruleNotes in Figure 4 store the assert and note statements as keys which point towards lists containing the individual elements of the statement in reverse Polish notation. Postfix notation is used to help evaluate the truth-value of each assert or note statement. The statements have a global scope. Therefore, every time a Device is created the program goes through each list and applies these statements to the Device.<br>
 
-
 
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<p align="center">'''Figure 4: Populating Global Data Structures with Rule Declarations, Assertions, and Notes '''</p>
 
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[[Image:Example2_rules.png|850px|center]]<br>
 
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<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
 
-
 
-
 
-
-----
 
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<span id="Results"><H3>Results</H3></span>
 
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Table 1 is an examination of actual experimentally created devices from a variety of sources.  The first two devices were created in the summer of 2008 in J.C Anderson’s lab at UC Berkeley for the International Genetically Engineering Machine Competition [https://2008.igem.org/Main_Page (iGEM 2008)]. These can be found in [http://partsregistry.org/ MIT’s registry of standard biological parts]. The third device is from Drew Endy’s lab at Stanford. The fourth part is from Edinburgh’s 2008 iGEM team. The fifth part is from Tom Knight’s lab at MIT. The description of these devices as well as their registry id is provided. In addition we detail the number of [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Properties|properties]], [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Parts|parts]], and [[Team:Berkeley_Software/Eugene#Devices|devices]] used by Eugene to specify them. For running the examples a MacBook Pro was used with a 2.4 GHz processor speed and 2 GB of memory.<br><br>
 
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<p align="center">'''Table 1: Examination of Experimental Designs Specified Using Eugene'''</p>
 
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<table border="1">
 
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<tr border="2">
 
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<th>Device</th>
 
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<th>Group</th>
 
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<th>Description</th>
 
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<th colspan="3">Number of</th>
 
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<th colspan="2">Lines of Code in program</th>
 
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<th>Percentage change Lines</th>
 
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<th>Ratio</th>
 
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<th>Compilation</th>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<th></th>
 
-
<th></th>
 
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<th></th>
 
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<th>Property Values</th>
 
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<th>Parts</th>
 
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<th>Devices</th>
 
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<th>Total</th>
 
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<th>Main File</th>
 
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<th>Total to Main File</th>
 
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<th>Sequence bp:Lines</th>
 
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<th>Time(ms)</th>
 
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</tr>
 
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<tr>
 
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<td>[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112809 BBa_K112809]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM08_UC_Berkeley  (2008-11-03)</td>
 
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<td align="center">T4 Lysis Device with Pbad</td>
 
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<td align="center">21</td>
 
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<td align="center">7</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">19</td>
 
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<td align="center">3</td>
 
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<td align="center">84</td>
 
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<td align="center">158:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112133 BBa_K112133]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM08_UC_Berkeley  (2008-10-30)</td>
 
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<td align="center">Xis Int temperature sensitive expression cassette</td>
 
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<td align="center">31</td>
 
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<td align="center">11</td>
 
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<td align="center">1</td>
 
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<td align="center">17</td>
 
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<td align="center">3</td>
 
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<td align="center">82</td>
 
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<td align="center">128:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_E7104 BBa_E7104]</td>
 
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<td align="center">Endy Lab <br> (2005-07-04)</td>
 
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<td align="center">T7 Consensus Promoter Sequence</td>
 
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<td align="center">10</td>
 
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<td align="center">4</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">16</td>
 
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<td align="center">3</td>
 
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<td align="center">81</td>
 
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<td align="center">68:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
-
</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K118021 BBa_K118021]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM08_Edinburgh      (2008-10-07)</td>
 
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<td align="center">T7 Consensus Promoter Sequence</td>
 
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<td align="center">6</td>
 
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<td align="center">2</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">15</td>
 
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<td align="center">3</td>
 
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<td align="center">80</td>
 
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<td align="center">72:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">93</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_I8510 BBa_I8510]</td>
 
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<td align="center">Knight Lab<br>                  (2008-01-09)</td>
 
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<td align="center">3OC6HSL->Inverter-> lacZalpha with orthogonal GFP protein generator</td>
 
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<td align="center">60</td>
 
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<td align="center">20</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">27</td>
 
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<td align="center">6</td>
 
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<td align="center">78</td>
 
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<td align="center">151:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">109</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_F2620 BBa_F2620]</td>
 
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<td align="center">Haseloff Lab, MIT <br> (2004-08-09)</td>
 
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<td align="center">3OC6HSL -> PoPS Receiver</td>
 
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<td align="center">18</td>
 
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<td align="center">6</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">19</td>
 
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<td align="center">3</td>
 
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<td align="center">84</td>
 
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<td align="center">56:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_J23040 BBa_J23040]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM2006_Berkeley  (2006-08-01)</td>
 
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<td align="center">AHL-dependent inverter</td>
 
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<td align="center">30</td>
 
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<td align="center">10</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">19</td>
 
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<td align="center">2</td>
 
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<td align="center">89</td>
 
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<td align="center">125:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_J5519 BBa_J5519]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM2006_Toronto  (2006-10-29)</td>
 
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<td align="center">Arabinose -> LacI ts -| cI 434</td>
 
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<td align="center">30</td>
 
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<td align="center">10</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">19</td>
 
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<td align="center">2</td>
 
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<td align="center">89</td>
 
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<td align="center">180:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">93</td>
 
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</tr>
 
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<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_J5522 BBa_J5522]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM2006_Toronto  <br> (2006-10-29)</td>
 
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<td align="center">Arabinose -> LacI ts -| pLac -> tetR -| pTet</td>
 
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<td align="center">32</td>
 
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<td align="center">11</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">22</td>
 
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<td align="center">2</td>
 
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<td align="center">91</td>
 
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<td align="center">159:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">93</td>
 
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</tr>
 
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<tr>
 
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<td align="center">[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K106695 BBa_K106695]</td>
 
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<td align="center">iGEM08_UCSF  <br> (2008-10-28)</td>
 
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<td align="center">Sir3 under a strong constitutive promoter</td>
 
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<td align="center">8</td>
 
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<td align="center">4</td>
 
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<td align="center">0</td>
 
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<td align="center">16</td>
 
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<td align="center">2</td>
 
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<td align="center">88</td>
 
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<td align="center">291:1</td>
 
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<td align="center">94</td>
 
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</tr>
 
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<tr>
 
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<th> Total </th>
 
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<td></td>
 
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<td></td>
 
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<th align="center">276</th>
 
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<th align="center">85</th>
 
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<th align="center">1</th>
 
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<th align="center">189</th>
 
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<th align="center">29</th>
 
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<th align="center">--</th>
 
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<th align="center">26436:189</th>
 
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<th align="center">952</th>
 
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</tr>
 
-
<tr>
 
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<th> Averages</th>
 
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<td></td>
 
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<td></td>
 
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<th>24.60</th>
 
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<th>8.50</th>
 
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<th>0.10</th>
 
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<th>18.90</th>
 
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<th>2.90</th>
 
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<th>84.72</th>
 
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<th>139:1</th>
 
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<th>95.20</th>
 
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</tr>
 
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</table><br><br>
 
-
The purpose of this investigation was to display the significance in the separation of Part and lower level property information, which is hidden in the header files from the Device level construction in the main file. As a result about an average of 85% less code is utilized in the main file. The real strength of the language becomes apparent with the introduced level of abstraction through the transfer of Part designs from databases to the header files. Such functionality allows the augmentation of data from other sources to the main design. The focus shifts from the low level details of the system to design validation through rule constructs and control flow implementation. The program becomes easier to manage. At the same time, the ratio of DNA base pairs to total lines of code implies the portability of very complex designs with large base pairs to other tools or systems. Sharing designs becomes much easier, especially, since the creation of the data structure is quickly achieved. The compilation times are very reasonable as the column in the table above shows. We have confidence that as designs move to encompass 10’s or 100’s of devices, the compilation time will remain very reasonable.
 
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<br>
 
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<p style="text-align: right;">[[#intro|back to Contents]]</p>
 
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-----
 
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<span id="Conclusions"><H3>Conclusions</H3></span>
 
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Overall, Eugene is a human writeable language that demonstrates both efficient textual representation of biological systems but also the capability of validating constructs. It presents the ability to work both on lower level property information but also on a Device level design. Eugene proves to be a portable solution to large system designs through its connection to different databases. Furthermore, based on its direct one to one relationship to standard biological Parts, Eugene can be translated to visual designs and vice versa. <br><br>
 
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For future releases, it will be important to incorporate other control statements. The language will require a notion of systematically going through lists, which can be achieved through loops. This can be useful when different combinations of Parts or Devices need to be traversed and some operations on them performed. At the moment the highest level in the Parts Hierarchy are Devices. Ideally, we would like to extend Eugene to contain Systems and the ability to operate on such a level by providing built-in functions, which will depend on new assembly standards. At the same time the user should have the ability to create functions. This introduces the importance of scope in variables and instances, since functions should only apply to specific instances. Currently, all instances in a file can be accessed globally.  Another aspect in the language is the direct access to a database. By providing a function to connect to a specified database would certainly give more expressional power to the language. Currently, data base access is performed outside of Eugene by translating XML information from the database to Eugene code.
 
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Revision as of 01:16, 21 October 2009



Eugene

Introduction

Eugene - red-headed stepchild and language

With the rise of partification in synthetic biology, there needs to be a formal specification to describe standard biological parts, especially when designing complex devices. The specification needs to be both human-writable and human-readable, a language that raises the level of abstraction where bioengineers can work. Eugene is such a language. Engineering at the part level requires both flexibility and rigidity. Eugene allows the user to mix custom parts with predefined parts from established databases. Parts can encapsulate an arbitrary amount of information, anything from a DNA sequence to experimental history. When designing a device in Eugene, parts can be freely stitched together on a whim, or strictly joined together based on rules. The design process is meant to be systematic yet intuitive. The user considers what information parts include, constructs parts to be used in the design, enforces restrictions on how parts can interact, and creates devices that are composites of the parts or other devices. Being a textual design, a device specified in Eugene is portable and easily lends itself to being translated into other formats, such as XML. In synthetic biology, the notion of part changes regularly and is debated tirelessly. Thus, Eugene tries to be adaptable and expressive in any climate. This page goes into the language specification in detail.

Contents
1. Introduction
2. Language Definition
3. Examples
4. Implementation
5. Results



Language Definition

In this section we describe the elements in the language. These involve: primitive data types, properties, parts, devices, rules, and conditional execution. The relationships between these language elements are shown in Figure 2. Here you can see that each subsequent category is built upon the previous category.


Figure 2: Relationship between Eugene Categories

Primitives
The language supports five predefined primitives. These are txt, num, boolean, txt[], and num[]. Strings (sequences of characters) are represented through the data type “txt”, where the actual text is specified in double quotes. Real numbers and integers are supported by the data type “num” and logical values by the data type “boolean”. Ordered lists of num and txt values can be created and individual members inside a list accessed by specifying an integer in the range from 0 to |List| - 1.

Examples (1) and (2) are two real code snippets of how primitives can be specified in Eugene. “listOfSequences” is simply a list of 3 arbitrary DNA sequences. “specificSequence” is the last element of “listOfSequences” (i.e. “ATCG”). Examples (3) and (4) show how the data type “num” can support integers and decimals.

txt[] listOfSequences = [ “ATG”, “TCG”, “ATCG”];                      (1)
txt specificSequence = listOfSequences[2];       (2)
num[] listOfNumbers = [2.5, 10, 3.4, 6];       (3)
num one = listOfNumbers[0];       (4)


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Properties
Properties represent characteristics of interest and are defined by primitives and associated with Parts. For example a user could define a property “Sequence” (the DNA sequence), ID (the uuid for a relational database which may hold the part), or Orientation (e.g. a forward or backward promoter). Examples 5-8 show how such properties would be defined. Property definitions must be defined by the five primitive types. In Part definitions properties will be bound to that Part as placeholders for the instantiation of values in Part declarations. Properties have to be defined before Parts can use them. The user can create new Property labels or use those created by other users and captured in header files. For example, the following Properties are predefined in the header file PropertyDefinition.h and do not need to be defined again if the header file is included in the main program:

Property ID(txt);                      // in header file                      (5)
Property Sequence(txt);                      // in header file                      (6)
Property Orientation(txt);                      // in header file                      (7)
Property RelativeStrength(num);                      // in header file                      (8)


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Parts
The data type Part represents a standard biological Part. A Part can be defined empty initially and then property labels can be added through the function addProperties() or properties can be bound to a Part during the definition.

Part Definition
Part definitions do not construct any Parts, but rather specify which Parts can be constructed. This can be done in the header file or in the main program. When the header file PartDefintion.h and PropertyDefintion.h are included, the following Parts and their corresponding property labels are predefined. For instance, the Part “Promoter” will have three properties associated with it and all instances of Promoter will inherit ID, Sequence and Orientation:

Part Promoter(ID, Sequence, Orientation);                                          (9)
Part ORF(ID, Sequence, Orientation);                      (10)
Part RBS(ID, Sequence, Orientation);                      (11)
Part Terminator(ID, Sequence, Orientation);                      (12)
Part RestrictionSite(ID, Sequence, Orientation);                      (13)
Part PrimerSite(ID, Sequence Orientation);                      (14)


If the properties are unknown during Part Definition process, the Part can be defined either empty or with the known properties. Later property labels can be added through the function addProperties() provided the property labels have been created beforehand. RBS will have four property labels after the following statement:

RBS.addProperties(RelativeStrength);                                                         (15)

Part Declaration
Part declarations make instances of predefined Parts and assign values to their properties. If the declaration specifies a list of values, it is assumed that every property will be assigned a value, where the order of the values corresponds to the order of the properties in the Part Definition as shown in example (17). Otherwise, a “dot notation“ followed by the name of the property can be employed, where the order becomes irrelevant as specified in the example below (16). The Part instance BBa_K112234_rbs has three properties associated with the Part RBS. These are ID, Sequence and Orientation. The identification label of a particular part from a database is stored in the ID placeholder to allow future access to the database. Sequence stores the DNA of a Part, while Orientation specifies the direction of the Part. Since dot notation is used, the ID value instantiation can be left out from the statement. Part declarations can be found in the header file PartDeclarations.h and are predefined if the header files are included in the main program.

RBS BBa_K112234_rbs (.Sequence("GATCTtaattgcggagacttt"), .Orientation("Forward"));              (16)
RBS BBa_K112234_rbs (“BBa_K112234_rbs”, "GATCTtaattgcggagacttt", “Forward”);              (17)


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Devices
Devices represent a composite of standard biological Parts and/or other Devices. In a Device declaration, the same Part and/or device can be used more than once. Property values of devices can be accessed with the dot operator; however, the value is the union of the property values of its members returned as a list. If the property is a txt or num, a txt[] or a num[] is returned. If the property is a txt[] or a num[], a txt[] or a num[] is also returned that consists of the lists appended together. For example the sequence of Device BBa_K112133 is the ordered union of the sequence of Part BBa_K112126 and the Device BBa_K112234. These two Devices are shown in Figures 3a and 3b, where the icon figures use true [http://openwetware.org/wiki/Endy:Notebook/BioBrick_Open_Graphical_Language Visual BioBrick Open Language symbols (vBOL)] icon graphic.

Table 1: Relationship between vBOL and Eugene

vBOL Description Eugene
Spectacles screenshot BBa K112133.jpg
Figure 3a: [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112133 Device BBa_K112133], consisting of one
[http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112126 Part Promoter BBa_K112126] and one [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112234 Device BBa_K112234]
Device BBa_K112133(BBa_K112126, BBa_K112234);
Spectacles screenshot BBa K112234.jpg
Figure 3b: [http://partsregistry.org/Part:BBa_K112234 Device BBa_K112234], consisting of one
Part Ribosome Binding Site and one Part Open Reading Frame
Device BBa_K112234(BBa_K112234_rbs, BBa_K112234_orf);

Individual Parts can be accessed through the use of square brackets and an index. The first member is indexed at zero. Square brackets can be stacked in the case of devices within devices. To access the first element BBa_K112234_rbs of Device BBa_K112234 through Device BBa_K112133, the following notation is supported:

BBa_K112133[1][0]              // references BBa_K112234_rbs              (18)


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Rules
The specification of rules provides the ability to validate Device declarations. Rule declarations in themselves do not perform the validation. They have to be “noted”, “asserted” or used as expressions inside an if-statement to give meaning. Rule declarations are single statements consisting of a left and right operand and one rule operator. The rule operators BEFORE, AFTER, WITH, NOTWITH, NEXTTO, NOTCONTAINS, NOTMORETHAN can be applied to Part instances or Device instances. Property values of Part/Device instances or primitives in relation with one Part/Device can be operators in rule declarations when using the relational operators <, <=, >, >=, !=, ==. These operators are overloaded when evaluating text and the text is compared according to alphabetical meaning. Table 2 provides a summary of the operators for Eugene rules.

Table 2: Eugene Operators for Specifying Rules

Compositional Operators
BEFORE operand 1 appears before operand 2 on devices
AFTER operand 1 appears after operand 2 on devices
WITH operand 1 appears with operand 2 on devices
NOTWITH operand 1 does not appear with operand 2 on devices
NEXTTO operand 1 is adjacent to operand 2 on devices
NOTMORETHAN operand 1 (a part instance) occurs not more than operand 2 times in a device
NOTCONTAINS unary operator, where operand 2 is not contained in device
Comparison Operators
< less than for numbers, comes before alphabetically for text
<= less than or equal to for numbers, comes before alphabetically or is equal to for text
> greater than for numbers, comes after alphabetically for text
>= greater than or equal for numbers, comes after alphabetically or is equal to for text
!= not equal to
== equal to
Boolean Operators
AND operand 1 AND operand 2
OR operand 1 OR operand 2
NOT NOT operand


Table 3: Examples of Rule Declarations

Eugene Syntax Description
Rule r1(BBa_K112234_rbs BEFORE BBa_K11223_orf); Illustrates a rule where all Parts BBa_K112234_rbs have to come before all Parts BBa_K11223_orf
Rule r2(BBa_K112234_rbs WITH BBa_K112234_orf); Illustrates a rule where the Part BBa_K112234_rbs has to be contained together with BBa_K112234_orf inside a Device
Rule r3(BBa_K112126 NEXTTO BBa_K112234); Illustrates a rule where the Part BBa_K112126 has to be next to BBa_K112234 when a Device is declared
num x = 2;
Rule r4(BBa_K112234_rbs NOTMORETHAN x);
Illustrates a rule where the Part BBa_K112234_rbs cannot occur more than x (=2) times in a Devie
Rule r5(NOTCONTAINS BBa_B0032); Illustrates a rule where a Device cannot contain the Part BBa_B0032
Rule r6(BBa_K112234_rbs.Sequence != BBa_K112234_orf.Sequence); Illustrates a rule that checks whether the sequence of BBa_K112234_rbs is equivalent to the sequence of BBa_K112234_orf
Rule r7(BBa_K112234_rbs.RelativeStrength > BBa_B0032.RelativeStrength); Illustrates the comparison of Property values of Parts, where the “RelativeStrength” Property value for Part BBa_K112234_rbs has to be greater than the “RelativeStrength” Property value for Part BBa_B0032
num relativeS = BBa_B0032.RelativeStrength;
Rule r8(p.RelativeStrength > relativeS);
Shows a similar comparison but uses the variable “relativeS” for comparison


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Asserting and Noting Rules
In order to take effect, rules need to be “asserted” or “noted”, once they are declared. The scopes of all assert or note statements encompass every new Device. Every time a new Device is declared and provided “Assertions” and “Note” statements exist, the validation process is performed on the newly created Device. Rule instances can be combined with each other through the use of the logical operators AND, OR, NOT in the statements. The difference between rule assertions and rule notes lies in the strength of the consequence once a violation is found. If no violation is found the program continues running.

Rule Assertion
These statements are strong assertions and the program terminates with an error once a Device composition violates the statement. The following statement will check if BBa_K112234_rbs is not contained together with BBa_K112234_orf in the Device and their sequences should not be equal. In this case an error will terminate the program since both parts are components of the device, therefore violating the Assert statement.

Assert ((NOT r4) AND (NOT r2));
Device BBa_K112234(BBa_K112234_rbs, BBa_K112234_orf);



Rule Notes
Notes issue warnings in the output when the violation occurs. But the program continues running. In the following example the Device BBa_K112133 meets the first note’s condition. However, the next note is violated and the program will issue a warning.

Note (r2 AND r3);
Note (NOT r1);
Device BBa_K112133(BBa_K112126, BBa_K112234);



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Conditional Statements
The use of conditional statements breaks up the flow of execution and allows certain blocks of code to be executed. Eugene supports two kinds of if-statements to achieve this: Rule validating if-statement and standard if-statement. The three logical operators AND, OR, NOT can combine statements of each type but not together.

Rule validating if-Statement
Rules can be checked not just through Assert and Note statements but also in an if-statement. In this approach only specific rules will be considered, as they might not apply to all Devices. The notation should specify a list of Devices and a logical combination of rule instances pertaining to that list. Suppose we would like to test a rule only on the specific Device instance BBa_K112133, where the Promoter BBa_K112126 comes before the Ribosome Binding Site BBa_K112234_rbs. Then the following conditional statement can achieve such conditional evaluation. In this case, the if statement will evaluate to true:

Rule r7(BBa_K112126 BEFORE BBa_K112234_rbs);
if(on (BBa_K112133) r7) {
	Block statement, in case of true evaluation
} else {
	Block statement, in case of false evaluation
}


Standard if-Statement
Expressions not pertaining to rules and Devices can be evaluated by the standard if-statement which supports the relational operators <, <=, >, >=, !=, == as well as the logical operators AND, OR, NOT.

boolean test = true;
if(test) {
	Assert(ruleWith);
} else {
	Assert(NOT ruleWith);
}
Device BBa_K112133(BBa_K112126, BBa_K112234);



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Header Files
The inclusion of header files allows the use of predefined Properties, Parts and Part Instances in the program. The manageability of code in the main file is more efficient by hiding the low level implementation of sequence and Parts. The user needs only to define Devices in the main file. On such a level the program can be written quickly and it is less error prone. Also, this allows each lab to have their own header file libraries. At the same time the option to change or declare other Properties, Parts and Part instances exists in the language.

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