DNA Computing Report
DNA Computing Report
A
Seminar Report
On
“DNA Computing”
Submitted in partial fulfillment of
the Bachelor of Engineering Degree
of the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur
Submitted By
Lokesh Kumar Jain
VIII Semester CE
DNA Computing
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that Mr. Lokesh Kumar Jain student of final year, COMPUTER
Engineering has submitted his Seminar report on DNA COMPUTING. The seminar
work and report is in partial fulfillment for the award of ‘Degree in COMPUTER
Engineering’ by the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur. The work done by him is genuine
and has not been submitted anywhere else for the award of any other degree or diploma.
Submitted to Guided By
Mr Ajay Khunteta Mr Vikas Thada
HOD CE Deptt. Lect. C.E. Deptt.
LIET, Alwar LIET, Alwar
DNA Computing
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would also thank all the teachers of our Department for there help in
various aspects during the seminar.
INDEX
• DNA
• DNA STRUCTURE
• INTERESTING FACTS
• WHAT IS NEED?
• HOW IT WORKS?
• DNA CHIP
• ADVANTAGES
• CHALLENGES TO IMPLEMENTATION
• APPLICATIONS
• LIMITATIONS
• LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
• DNA BASICS
DNA Computing
(Deoxyribonucleic Acid Computing):
DNA Structure:
DNA Computing
Interesting Facts:
the answer. A DNA computer, on the other hand, tests all possible
answers simultaneously, offering the prospect of much speedier solutions.
HOW IT WORKS?
Generic Code
DNA Chip:
Mother Board
DNA Computing
ADVANTAGES:
Challenges to Implementation:
• Practical protocols for input and output of data into the memory.
• A Representation of data in DNA sequences.
• An Understand the information capacity of the hybridization interactions in
large collections of many different DNA sequences.
• Appropriate physical models to guide design and experimentation
APPLICATIONS:
• DNA sequencing
• DNA fingerprinting
• DNA mutation detection
• Development and miniaturization of biosensors, which could
potentially allow communication between molecular sensory computers
and conventional electronic computers.
• The fabrication of nanoscale objects that can be placed in intracellular
locations for monitoring and modifying cell function
• The replacement of silicon devices with nanoscale molecular-based
computational systems, and The application of biopolymers in the
formation of novel nanostructured materials with unique optical and
selective transport properties
• DNA based models of computation might be useful for simulating or
modeling other emerging computational paradigms, such as quantum
computing, which may not be feasible until much later.
• Evolutionary programming for applications in design or expert systems.
• In theory, this technology could one day lead to the development of
hybrid computer systems, in which a silicon-based PC generates the
code for automated laboratory- based operations, carried out in a miniature
'lab in a box' linked to the PC.
DNA Computing
LIMITATIONS:
• A factor that places limits on his method is the error rate for each
operation. Since these operations are not deterministic but stochastically
driven, each step contains statistical errors, limiting the number
of iterations one can do successively before the probability of
producing an error becomes greater than producing the correct
result.
• Algorithms proposed so far use relatively slow molecular-biological
operations. Each primitive operation takes hours when you run them
with a small test tube of DNA. Some concrete algorithms are
just for solving some concrete problems. Every Generating solution
sets, even for some relatively simple problems, may require
impractically large amounts of memory. Also, with each DNA
molecule acting as a separate processor, there are problems with
transmitting information from one molecule to another that have yet to
be solved.
DNA Computing
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:
Conventional
Basics DNA Computers
Computers
Storage Media Nucleic acids Semiconductors
Memory Capacity Ultra-High High
Biochemical Logical Operations
Operators
Operations (and, or, not)
Simultaneous
Operations Bitwise (Sequential)
(Parallel)
Speed of each
Slow Fast
Operation
Process Stochastic Deterministic
DNA BASICS:
5’-ACGCGTACGTACAAGTGTCCGAAT-3’
3’-TGCGCATGCATGTTCACAGGCTTA-5’
Experiment:
Bibliography
1. http://www.usc.edu/dept/molecular-science/papers/adleman-
science.pdf
2. WWW.ieee.org
3. www.acm.org
4. Adleman Original Papers
5. www.google.com