Synthetic biology A possible use of the integrated nanoliter system is in
synthetic biology (controlling
biological fluids). Since the integrated nanoliter system is generally made up of many controllable
microfabricated fluidic networks, integrated nanoliter systems are an ideal environment for controlling
biological fluids. A common process of synthetic biology that uses the integrated nanoliter system is processing complex reactions among
biological fluids, which usually involves separating a
biological solution into individual pure or simpler
reagent solutions then mixing the individual solutions for the desired
product. An advantage of using the integrated nanoliter system in synthetic biology includes the extremely small length of the
microfluidic networks that result in fast
diffusion rates. Another advantage is the fast mixing rates due to the combination of
diffusion and
advection (
chaotic mixing). Compared to previous
microfluidic systems, another advantage is the smaller necessary amount of
reagent solutions for a single operation due to the integrated nanoliter system's
microscopic scalability. Smaller necessary amounts of
reagent solutions tend to lead to more operations that can be carried out with less
delay from gathering or reproducing the necessary amounts of
reagent solutions.
Single-cell gene expression analysis Another possible use of the integrated nanoliter system is in single-cell
gene expression analysis. One benefit of using the integrated nanoliter system is its capability to detect the changes of a gene expression more accurately than the previous technique of
microarray. The nanoliter system's
microscopic scalability (
nanoliter to
picoliter scale) allows it to analyze the
gene expression at the single-cell level (around 1
picoliter), while the
microarray analyzes changes of the gene expression by
averaging a large group of cells. Another convenient and important benefit is the integrated nanoliter system's capability of having all the necessary
biological fluids in the system before operation by storing each
biological fluid in a specific
microfabricated fluidic network. The integrated nanoliter system is convenient because the
biological fluids are all controlled by a computer compared to how previous systems required a manual loading of every
biological fluid. The integrated nanoliter system is also important for the gene expression analysis because the analysis would not be undesirably influenced by
contamination due to the "closed" system while in operation. == References ==