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bioprosesser

Bioprosesser is a term used in bioengineering to describe a device, system, or architecture that uses biological substrates to perform information processing, decision making, or control tasks that resemble those carried out by electronic processors.

Bioprosessers may be based on living cells, on cell-free biochemical networks, or on a hybrid combination of

Common components include biosensors that translate signals into biochemical outputs, reaction networks that implement logic or

Potential applications range from smart bioreactors and environmental sensing to medical diagnostics and in vivo therapy.

Challenges include limited stability and reproducibility of biological components, integration with electronic control systems, safety and

both.
In
intracellular
implementations,
genetic
circuits
programmed
into
cells
act
as
logic
modules
that
process
inputs
such
as
light,
chemicals,
or
metabolites.
In
cell-free
designs,
enzymes
or
ribosomes
are
arranged
in
reaction
networks
to
execute
predefined
logic.
The
resulting
units
can
function
as
processors
that
interpret
biological
signals
and
trigger
appropriate
responses.
memory,
and
actuators
that
adjust
a
process,
for
example
by
releasing
a
compound,
altering
a
flow,
or
changing
a
temperature
or
pH.
The
architecture
and
materials
used
depend
on
the
intended
application,
requirements
for
speed,
and
the
operating
environment.
Bioprosessers
can
automate
decision
making
in
bioprocessing,
enabling
more
adaptive
production
and
closed-loop
control
in
biotechnology.
regulatory
considerations,
and
the
need
for
robust
error
handling
in
dynamic
biological
environments.
The
term
is
not
uniformly
standardized;
researchers
more
often
use
bioprocessor,
bio-computer,
or
synthetic
biology
circuit
to
describe
related
concepts.