Information decay and enzymatic information recovery for DNA data storage


Date

2022-10-20

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

Synthetic DNA has been proposed as a storage medium for digital information due to its high theoretical storage density and anticipated long storage horizons. However, under all ambient storage conditions, DNA undergoes a slow chemical decay process resulting in nicked (broken) DNA strands, and the information stored in these strands is no longer readable. In this work we design an enzymatic repair procedure, which is applicable to the DNA pool prior to readout and can partially reverse the damage. Through a chemical understanding of the decay process, an overhang at the 3’ end of the damaged site is identified as obstructive to repair via the base excision-repair (BER) mechanism. The obstruction can be removed via the enzyme apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease I (APE1), thereby enabling repair of hydrolytically damaged DNA via Bst polymerase and Taq ligase. Simulations of damage and repair reveal the benefit of the enzymatic repair step for DNA data storage, especially when data is stored in DNA at high storage densities (=low physical redundancy) and for long time durations.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

5 (1)

Pages / Article No.

1117

Publisher

Nature

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Data processing; DNA sequencing; Single-strand DNA breaks

Organisational unit

03673 - Stark, Wendelin J. / Stark, Wendelin J. check_circle
08826 - Grass, Robert (Tit.-Prof.) check_circle

Notes

Funding

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