ITCOITMar 17

Coded Information Retrieval for Block-Structured DNA-Based Data Storage

arXiv:2603.1715442.9h-index: 1
AI Analysis

This work addresses efficient data retrieval in DNA storage systems, which is an incremental advancement in coding theory for specific storage applications.

The paper tackles the problem of coded information retrieval for block-structured data in DNA-based storage, formalizing it and deriving lower bounds and constraints on expected retrieval times, with analysis showing that file-dedicated MDS codes achieve optimality and asymptotically approach a hyperbolic boundary.

We study the problem of coded information retrieval for block-structured data, motivated by DNA-based storage systems where a database is partitioned into multiple files that must each be recoverable as an atomic unit. We initiate and formalize the block-structured retrieval problem, wherein $k$ information symbols are partitioned into two files $F_1$ and $F_2$ of sizes $s_1$ and $s_2 = k - s_1$. The objective is to characterize the set of achievable expected retrieval time pairs $\bigl(E_1(G), E_2(G)\bigr)$ over all $[n,k]$ linear codes with generator matrix $G$. We derive a family of linear lower bounds via mutual exclusivity of recovery sets, and develop a nonlinear geometric bound via column projection. For codes with no mixed columns, this yields the hyperbolic constraint $s_1/E_1 + s_2/E_2 \le 1$, which we conjecture to hold universally whenever $\max\{s_1,s_2\} \ge 2$. We analyze explicit codes, such as the identity code, file-dedicated MDS codes, and the systematic global MDS code, and compute their exact expected retrieval times. For file-dedicated codes we prove MDS optimality within the family and verify the hyperbolic constraint. For global MDS codes, we establish dominance by the proportional local MDS allocation via a combinatorial subset-counting argument, providing a significantly simpler proof compared to recent literature and formally extending the result to the asymmetric case. Finally, we characterize the limiting achievability region as $n \to \infty$: the hyperbolic boundary is asymptotically achieved by file-dedicated MDS codes, and is conjectured to be the exact boundary of the limiting achievability region.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes