posted on 2020-09-21, 17:17authored byJenna
E. Gallegos, Diptendu M. Kar, Indrakshi Ray, Indrajit Ray, Jean Peccoud
The field of synthetic biology relies
on an ever-growing supply
chain of synthetic genetic material. Technologies to secure the exchange
of this material are still in their infancy. Solutions proposed thus
far have focused on watermarks, a dated security approach that can
be used to claim authorship, but is subject to counterfeit, and does
not provide any information about the integrity of the genetic material
itself. In this manuscript, we describe how data encryption and digital
signature algorithms can be used to ensure the integrity and authenticity
of synthetic genetic constructs. Using a pilot software that generates
digital signatures and other encrypted data for plasmids, we demonstrate
that we can predictably extract information about the author, the
identity, the integrity of plasmid sequences, and even annotations
from sequencing data alone without a reference sequence, all without
compromising the function of the plasmids. Encoding a digital signature
into a DNA molecule provides an avenue for genetic designers to claim
authorship of DNA molecules. This technology could help compliance
with material transfer agreements and other licensing agreements.