Team:KULeuven/Design/Integrated Model

From 2009.igem.org

Revision as of 20:58, 27 September 2009 by Bart Bosmans (Talk | contribs)


Full model

The complete model of our vanillin producing bacteria is shown in the next figure. The boxes around some species have no biological meaning they merely serve to distinguish between the different subcomponents of our system. The detailed information about the models of all the subcomponents can be found on their own pages.

Biological model of our system

Because we want to optimize the design of the feedback loop in our system, we developed a block scheme of the bacteria. It shows each component as a block performing a specific task. The diagram is used to develop some theories about the performance of the feedback loop.

Block model of the system

Control theory

Control theory is an interdisciplinary branch of engineering and mathematics, that deals with the behavior of dynamical systems. The purpose is to design a controller which controls the system so that it behaves as desired. There exists several criteria to measure the performance of the controller.

Stability

The system can be called stable if, no matter what the input signal (the blue light) is, the output (vanillin concentration) will remain finite after an infinite amount of time.

Tracking problem

This criterium is an indication of how well the output well follow the wanted reference system, we want the difference between the output and the wanted reference signal as small as possible.

Disturbance rejection

Most controlled system are disturbed by other systems in their neighbourhood, in our case imagine someone adding an extra amount of vanillin to the environment. We don't want to see these disturbances in our output of vanillin, meaning that the vanillin concentration remains at the desired level. The disturbance rejection criteria indicates the ability of the system to reject those inputs.

Robustness

As with every model, our model of the bacteria is not perfect. Robustness is a property of a property, if the system is stabilizes in a robust way, it means that all systems that are similar to the modelled system will be stable. It's then assumed that the controller will also stabilize the real system as it is assumed to be very similar to the modelled system.

Biological implications

Because the controller has to be implemented in 'biological technology', we choose the simplest possible design of controller, the proportional controller. The gain in the feedback loop can be adjusted by the use of low/high copy plasmids for the genes involved in the transduction of the signal in the feedback loop.