Shape Replication Through Self-Assembly and RNase Enzymes
Published on: 2010/01/05
Abstract
We introduce the problem of shape replication in the Wang tile self-assembly model. Given an input shape, we consider the problem of designing a self-assembly system which will replicate that shape into either a specific number of copies, or an unbounded number of copies. Motivated by practical DNA implementations of Wang tiles, we consider a model in which tiles consisting of DNA or RNA can be dynamically added in a sequence of stages. We further permit the addition of RNase enzymes capable of disintegrating RNA tiles. Under this model, we show that arbitrary genus-0 shapes can be replicated infinitely many times using only \(O(1)\) distinct tile types and \(O(1)\) stages. Further, we show how to replicate precisely \(n\) copies of a shape using \(O(\log n)\) stages and \(O(1)\) tile types.
Authors
Zachary Abel, Nadia Benbernou, Mirela Damian, Erik Demaine, Martin Demaine, Robin Flatland, Scott Kominers, Robert Schweller
File
Shape Replication Through Self-Assembly and RNase Enzymes.pdf