Nanolithographic Fabrication Technologies for Network-Based Biocomputation Devices

Author:

Meinecke Christoph R.12ORCID,Heldt Georg2,Blaudeck Thomas123ORCID,Lindberg Frida W.4,van Delft Falco C. M. J. M.5ORCID,Rahman Mohammad Ashikur6,Salhotra Aseem6,Månsson Alf6ORCID,Linke Heiner4,Korten Till7ORCID,Diez Stefan78,Reuter Danny12,Schulz Stefan E.123

Affiliation:

1. Center for Microtechnologies, Chemnitz University of Technology, 09107 Chemnitz, Germany

2. Department Nano Device Technologies, Fraunhofer Institute for Electronic Nano Systems (ENAS), 09126 Chemnitz, Germany

3. Research Center for Materials, Architectures and Integration of Nanomembranes (MAIN), Chemnitz University of Technology, 09126 Chemnitz, Germany

4. NanoLund and Solid State Physics, Lund University, 22100 Lund, Sweden

5. Molecular Sense Ltd., Liverpool L36 8HT, UK

6. Department of Chemistry and Biomedical Sciences, Linnaeus University, 39182 Kalmar, Sweden

7. B CUBE—Center for Molecular Bioengineering and Cluster of Excellence Physics of Life, Technische Universität Dresden, 01307 Dresden, Germany

8. Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, 01307 Dresden, Germany

Abstract

Network-based biocomputation (NBC) relies on accurate guiding of biological agents through nanofabricated channels produced by lithographic patterning techniques. Here, we report on the large-scale, wafer-level fabrication of optimized microfluidic channel networks (NBC networks) using electron-beam lithography as the central method. To confirm the functionality of these NBC networks, we solve an instance of a classical non-deterministic-polynomial-time complete (“NP-complete”) problem, the subset-sum problem. The propagation of cytoskeletal filaments, e.g., molecular motor-propelled microtubules or actin filaments, relies on a combination of physical and chemical guiding along the channels of an NBC network. Therefore, the nanofabricated channels have to fulfill specific requirements with respect to the biochemical treatment as well as the geometrical confienement, with walls surrounding the floors where functional molecular motors attach. We show how the material stack used for the NBC network can be optimized so that the motor-proteins attach themselves in functional form only to the floor of the channels. Further optimizations in the nanolithographic fabrication processes greatly improve the smoothness of the channel walls and floors, while optimizations in motor-protein expression and purification improve the activity of the motor proteins, and therefore, the motility of the filaments. Together, these optimizations provide us with the opportunity to increase the reliability of our NBC devices. In the future, we expect that these nanolithographic fabrication technologies will enable production of large-scale NBC networks intended to solve substantially larger combinatorial problems that are currently outside the capabilities of conventional software-based solvers.

Funder

European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science

Reference40 articles.

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