Researchers have made great progress in recent years in the design and creation of biological circuits — systems that, like electronic circuits, can take a number of different inputs and deliver a particular kind of output. But while individual components of such biological circuits can have precise and predictable responses, those outcomes become less predictable as more such elements are combined.
A team of researchers at MIT has now come up with a way of greatly reducing that unpredictability, introducing a device that could ultimately allow such circuits to behave nearly as predictably as their electronic counterparts. The findings are published this week in the journal Nature Biotechnology, in a paper by associate professor of mechanical engineering Domitilla Del Vecchio and professor of biological engineering Ron Weiss.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 26 2014, @03:26AM
...its effect is similar to that of load drivers used in electronic circuits...
This sounds like a good use of "impedance match/mismatch", unlike the bogus one quoted in the article on Google "Inbox" involving translation from one language to another.