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Fortune Magazine
gave it plenty of ink.
So have a host of
other trade and business journals of any consequence, including American
Laboratory and International Laboratory.
So what's the buzz?
It might be called the smallest development in the history of analytical
chemistry - the Agilent
2100 bioanalyzer.
Described by Fortune
as approximately "the size of a toaster", the Agilent 2100 bioanalyzer is the
first commercial instrument to incorporate Lab-on-a-Chip technology.
Caliper Technologies
and the Hewlett-Packard Chemical Analysis Group (now evolved into Agilent
Technologies) signed a collaboration agreement last year in which
Caliper agreed to provide the LabChip™ technology while Agilent would integrate
this into instruments and market the resulting systems.

The Agilent 2100 bioanalyzer
represents he first fruits of that collaboration. The new instrument signals
the beginning of the next era in analytical chemistry - the age of the
miniaturized automated laboratory.
Nanoscalar
LabChip™ technology
incorporates microfabrication techniques borrowed from the semiconductor
industry to build various chip architectures. The chips comprise microchannels
fabricated in glass that create interconnected networks of fluid reservoirs
and pathways. The chips represent the heart of a nanoscale laboratory.
The
Agilent 2100 bioanalzyer improves the quality of nucleic acid analysis by integrating
separation, detection and digital data processing within a single compact
instrument. The system is intended for use by molecular biologists and
biochemists analyzing samples in the context of cloning experiments, quality
control of sequencing templates, analysis of PCR and RT-PCR products,
quality control of DNA array probes and mutation detection via RFLP.
At the moment, the
Agilent 2100 bioanalyzer is being offered with three LabChip kits, two for
DNA sizing and one for RNA analysis assay. All the ingredients necessary
to run an analysis, including chips and chemistry, are provided in each
assay kit. More chips are coming, with the development of new kits for
other applications well under way.

Serious savings
Agilent's LabChip instruments
are destined to have a significant impact on laboratory cost-effectiveness.
For one thing, nucleic fragment size and concentration can be determined
in one-half to one-third the time of conventional gel separation technology,
accompanied by improved sensitivity and reproducibility.
Further, sample consumption
is reduced to near negligibility, with sample injections running in the
picoliter range. In a discipline where samples can cost in the hundreds
of thousands of dollars per ounce, this new frugality has got to have
an impact on the bottom line.
Equipment
costs will drop sharply as well. Why? The chip is not only replaceable
but, at about $12 per, it's disposable. Changing a method simply requires
the user to insert a different type of chip and employ the appropriate
automated software protocol. Sample handling, analyte separation, detection,
quantitation and subsequent data processing are all integrated within
the same hardware / software assembly.
Savings potential
is augmented by the reduced need for a full complement of application-specific
hardware or periodic system upgrades, along with the low training requirements
associated with the system. Training on the new instrument is minimal,
particularly for anyone already comfortable with conventional slab gel
electrophoresis.
Clearly, 1999 will
go down as the year that analytical chemistry finally moved out of the
realm of the 18th century laboratory of workbenches and rooms full of
dedicated equipment, and into the 21st century of nanoscale chemistry,
microfluidics, and the miniaturized lab.
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