Microscopy & microtechniques
Microtechnique used for DNA manipulation
Apr 03 2012
A new device has made microtechnique news owing to its ability to manipulate and measure DNA.
The novel microfluidic technology, called the nanoslinky, has been developed by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and could be used for measuring DNA and nonoscale technologies. It measures at around ten million times smaller than the popular spring-shaped toy currently in use.
Nanoslinky uses a staircase-shaped nanoscale fluidic channel that is able to control otherwise random drift of DNA through a fluid. The DNA falls down the stairs much like a slinky toy, diffusing randomly across the step and increasing its entropy the further down it falls.
Samuel Stavis, part of the team of researchers at the NIST said: “Control over the behaviour of a DNA molecule is built into the staircase structure.
"After placing the molecule on the top step (by driving the DNA strand up the staircase with an electric field), no external forces are needed to make it move. The staircase is a passive nanofluidic technology that automates complex manipulations and measurements of DNA."
Posted by Fiona Griffiths
Digital Edition
Lab Asia Dec 2025
December 2025
Chromatography Articles- Cutting-edge sample preparation tools help laboratories to stay ahead of the curveMass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy Articles- Unlocking the complexity of metabolomics: Pushi...
View all digital editions
Events
Jan 21 2026 Tokyo, Japan
Jan 28 2026 Tokyo, Japan
Jan 29 2026 New Delhi, India
Feb 07 2026 Boston, MA, USA
Asia Pharma Expo/Asia Lab Expo
Feb 12 2026 Dhaka, Bangladesh



