DNA as Features: Organic Software Product Lines

2019 
Software product line engineering is a best practice for managing reuse in families of software systems. In this work, we explore the use of product line engineering in the emerging programming domain of synthetic biology. In synthetic biology, living organisms are programmed to perform new functions or improve existing functions. These programs are designed and constructed using small building blocks made out of DNA. We conjecture that there are families of products that consist of common and variable DNA parts, and we can leverage product line engineering to help synthetic biologists build, evolve, and reuse these programs. As a first step towards this goal, we perform a domain engineering case study that leverages an open-source repository of more than 45,000 reusable DNA parts. We are able to identify features and their related artifacts, all of which can be composed to make different programs. We demonstrate that we can successfully build feature models representing families for two commonly engineered functions. We then analyze an existing synthetic biology case study and demonstrate how product line engineering can be beneficial in this domain.
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