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Infineon delivers new biochip system
By John Blau
IDG News Service, Düsseldorf Bureau
27-03-2003

A biochip system designed to accelerate the development of new drugs
is available now
from German chip maker Infineon Technologies AG, the company
announced Wednesday.

The system features the Flow-Thru Chip, a semiconductor with a
surface size of only 1 centimeter that can simultaneously analyze the
reaction of up to 400 known genes to a specific substance, Infineon
said in a statement. The system also includes a hybridization unit
and measuring apparatus with an integrated high-sensitivity camera.

The biochip can be used to study inflammations, various types of
cancer and neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and
multiple sclerosis. Researchers can also customize the chips to meet
their scientific needs, according to the statement.

Typically, pharmaceutical companies invest on average 12 to 15 years
developing and testing a new drug, Infineon said. Using new, chip-
based analysis methods, the pharmaceutical industry expects times
savings of one to two years in drug development, the German chip
maker said.

The Flow-Thru Chip is made of silicon. Infineon has developed a
process to etch about 1 million pores with a diameter of one-tenth of
a human hair on the chip's tiny surface. Known sections of genes,
such as genetic material that can alter breast cancer activity, are
placed in the pores. The genes fix themselves to the walls of the
micro-pores. The samples are treated with a potentially active agent
and repeatedly pumped back and forth through the pores in a process
known as Flow-Thru.

In the process, only the matching genes of the sample will bind to
the gene sections on the pore wall, according to Infineon. A
luminescent dye, added in a subsequent step, binds to the matched
genes and emits detectable light that is captured by a camera and
forwarded to a computer.

Once a chip is prepared with genetic material, the test to determine
whether a substance is effective is fast and easy, Infineon said. It
compares the light pattern of the healthy sample with the pattern of
the treated pattern. If they match, the active agent is judged
effective.

The Flow-Thru Chip system costs approximately €60,000 (US$63,936),
according to the statement. Infineon will sell the product in Europe,
while MetriGenix Inc. will market it in the U.S., the company said.

SOURCE: IDG News Service
http://www.idg.com.sg/idgwww.nsf/unidlookup/3BCE4D76999888FF48256CF600
1DE869?OpenDocument

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