DNA computing is an emerging branch of unconventional computing which uses DNA, biochemistry, and molecular biology hardware, instead of the traditional electronic computing. Research and development in this area concerns theory, experiments, and applications of DNA computing. Although the field originally started with the demonstration of a computing application by Len Adleman in 1994, it has now been expanded to several other avenues such as the development of storage technologies,[1][2][3] nanoscale imaging modalities,[4][5][6] synthetic controllers and reaction networks,[7][8][9][10] etc.
^Shah, Shalin; Wee, Jasmine; Song, Tianqi; Ceze, Luis; Strauss, Karin; Chen, Yuan-Jyue; Reif, John (2020-05-04). "Using Strand Displacing Polymerase To Program Chemical Reaction Networks". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 142 (21): 9587–9593. doi:10.1021/jacs.0c02240. ISSN0002-7863. PMID32364723. S2CID218504535.