DNA Computing with Logic Gates
Traditional Logic Gates An XOR Gate Implementation:
DNA AND Gate
Process of ANDing Electrophoresis measures the size of each strand This provides the output for the two strands A DNA sequence that is the length of the two individual strands represents an AND operation
OR Gate OR operation is also possible to construct using the same process
NOT Gate Not yet developed Thus more complicated gates such as the XOR gate can not be developed. Together the AND, OR, and NOT gates can be combined to form any logic system. So these complex systems cannot be developed until the NOT gate is created.
Research The Rochester team is one of the first to seriously consider whether DNA computers might be used for problems now routinely done by electronic computers, and to emulate the way electronic computers "think."
DNA Gates in DNA Computers DNA gates could make DNA computation even faster by speeding the tally of the DNA strands that serve as answers to computations. Rather than running the DNA through a slow gel electrophoresis, researchers could add labeled strands to a DNA chip, which consists of hundreds of squares containing different known strands of DNA. The added DNA binds to the strands in the square containing its complementary DNA sequence, and scientists could use the labels to detect the DNA answers.