Home

biocomputing

Biocomputing refers to computing approaches that use biological components or principles to process information. It includes using living cells or biomolecules to perform computation, as well as non-biological systems that emulate biological information processing. The field covers DNA computing, biomolecular circuits, DNA nanotechnology, and living-cell gene circuits.

Historical milestones include Leonard Adleman's 1994 demonstration that DNA can solve a combinatorial problem, a founding

Applications span DNA data storage, biosensing and diagnostics, programmable therapeutic gene circuits, environmental monitoring with engineered

Challenges include reliability and scalability of molecular systems, integration with conventional electronics, and controlling errors. Safety,

Future directions point to hybrid bio-electronic devices, more robust DNA-based storage, and scalable living-cell computing platforms

result
for
DNA
computing.
Since
then,
researchers
have
developed
DNA
strand
displacement,
enzyme-driven
networks,
and
synthetic
gene
circuits
that
implement
logic
in
vitro
or
in
living
cells.
microbes,
and
smart
materials
that
respond
to
chemical
cues.
ethics,
and
regulatory
considerations
affect
the
development
and
deployment
of
engineered
organisms
and
bio-inspired
devices.
for
sensing,
medicine,
and
environmental
management.