Topical 3: 2006 Annual Meeting of the American Electrophoreses Society (AES)

Session 327 - Advances in CE and Microdevice Technology for Genomic Analysis
Microfluidic-based DNA and protein separation systems are beginning to emerge from the research laboratory and appear as commercially available products for use in a variety of genomic analysis applications. If sufficient miniaturization can be achieved, these microfabricated systems will enjoy a tremendous cost advantage over today’s conventional macroscale systems, thereby ensuring a central role in future genomic analysis efforts such as the ambitious goal of sequencing a genome for $1,000 or less. Strategies to develop improved sieving media based on a variety of polymeric and non-polymeric materials incorporating uniform and reproducible microstructures promise to generate tremendous improvements in the achievable level of separation performance. In addition, separation matrices composed of nanofabricated structures constructed directly on the surfaces of silicon, glass, and plastic substrates offer exciting possibilities in terms of exerting precise control over pore size and sieving properties. Novel techniques to analyze DNA and proteins by directly probing the motion of single molecules either through nanoscale fluidic channels or through membrane channel nanopores also show enormous potential. Chemical engineers continue to make important contributions in these areas, and we invite abstracts related to any aspect of the development or study of biomolecule separation technology at the microscale, or on miniaturized devices.
Chair:Malgorzata A. Witek
CoChair:Adrienne R. Minerick
 How Is It Possible to Sequence 600 Bases of DNA in 6.5 Minutes? The Central Role of Carefully Engineered Polymer Networks and Coatings in Microchip Electrophoresis
Christopher P. Fredlake, Annelise E. Barron
 Nanostructural Characterization of Photopolymerized Polyacrylamide Gels for DNA Electrophoresis
Jian Wang, Victor M. Ugaz
 DNA Sequencing and Separation in Free Solution Using Engineered Drag-Tags
Robert J. Meagher, Russell D. Haynes, Jennifer Lin, Jennifer A. Coyne, Jong-In Won, Annelise E. Barron
 Microchip-Based Electrophoretic Analysis of Low Abundant Unknown Mutations Using Site-Specific Nicking and Ligation Enzymes
Rondedrick Sinville, Hanna Pincas, Francis Barany, Steven A. Soper
 Sacrificial Layer Methods for Making High-Performance Capillary Electrophoresis Microchips
Adam T. Woolley, Ryan T. Kelly, Bridget A. Peeni, Yi Li
 Optimal Separation Times with an Orthogonal Electrical Field in a Cylindrical Capillary
Pablo Vergara, Mario A. Oyanader, Pedro E. Arce

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