From: NSA TORTURE TECHNOLOGY, NEWS and RESEARCH on
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18989-dna-logic-gates-herald-injectable-computers.html?full=true&print

DNA logic gates herald injectable computers

a.. 11:03 02 June 2010 by Kate McAlpine
a.. Magazine issue 2763. Subscribe and save

DNA-based logic gates that could carry out calculations inside the body have
been constructed for the first time. The work brings the prospect of
injectable biocomputers programmed to target diseases as they arise.

"The biocomputer would sense biomarkers and immediately react by releasing
counter-agents for the disease," says Itamar Willner of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Israel, who led the work.

The new logic gates are formed from short strands of DNA and their
complementary strands, which in conjunction with some simple molecular
machinery mimic their electronic equivalent. Two strands act as the input:
each represents a 1 when present or a 0 when absent. The response to their
presence or absence represents the output, which can also be a 1 or 0.

Take the "exclusive OR" or XOR logic gate. It produces an output when either
of the two inputs is present but not when both are present or both are
absent. To put the DNA version to the test, Willner and his team added
molecules to both the complementary strands that caused them to fluoresce
when each was present in isolation, representing a logical 1 as the output.
But when both were present, the complementary strands combined and quenched
the fluorescence, representing a 0 output.

Simultaneous calculations
One of DNA computing's advantages is that it allows calculations to be
carried out in parallel, if different types of logic gates are represented
by different ingredients. The team tested this process by tossing the XOR
ingredients into a test tube, along with those for two other gates, to
produce the first few steps involved in binary addition and subtraction.

The team was also able to create logic gates that calculate in sequence. The
trick here is to make the output from the first gate a new DNA string that
can be used as the input for a second gate and so on. Such "cascading gates"
allow for more complex calculations: the entire set of steps required for
addition and subtraction, for example, or to deliver a multi-step drug
treatment.

Previous DNA-based computers tended to slow down at each step as the DNA
strands were used only once, and so became depleted with time. One
significant advance claimed by Willner and his team is that their DNA
strands reform after each step, allowing long sequences of calculations to
be carried out easily for the first time.

Even a single logic gate could have useful medical applications, Willner
says. His group built and tested a gate designed to reduce the activity of
the blood-clotting enzyme thrombin, which can lead to brain damage following
a head injury. The gate acts as a switch that is triggered by the presence
of thrombin. Part of the gate consists of a DNA strand connected to a
molecule that binds to thrombin. If thrombin is present, this molecule is
released, otherwise it stays bound and inert. Such a smart drug could be
injected into the bloodstream in advance and would only switch on when
needed (Nature Nanotechnology, DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2010.88).

Another problem with earlier DNA computers is that they use enzymes to
manipulate the DNA, and so function only in certain chemical environments
that cannot easily be reproduced inside the body. Willner's team use
DNA-like molecules to do this job.

"Being enzyme-free, it has potential in future diagnostic and medical
applications," says Benny Gil of the Weizmann Institute of Science in
Rehovot, Israel. He is impressed with the new gate system but recognises
that it will take years of research and development to bring "smart drugs"
to medicine.







.................................................................
Posted via TITANnews - Uncensored Newsgroups Access
>>>> at http://www.TitanNews.com <<<<
-=Every Newsgroup - Anonymous, UNCENSORED, BROADBAND Downloads=-