2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session Y7: Control of Light with Bacteriorhodopsin
11:15 AM–2:51 PM,
Friday, March 14, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: RO5
Sponsoring
Units:
DBP DCP
Chair: Gopal Rao, University of Massachusetts-Boston
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.Y7.2
Abstract: Y7.00002 : Protein-Based Three-Dimensional Memories and Associative Processors*
11:51 AM–12:27 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Robert Birge
(University of Connecticut)
The field of bioelectronics has benefited from the fact that
nature has
often solved problems of a similar nature to those which must be
solved to
create molecular electronic or photonic devices that operate with
efficiency
and reliability. Retinal proteins show great promise in
bioelectronic
devices because they operate with high efficiency ($\sim
$0.65{\%}), high
cyclicity ($>$10$^{7})$, operate over an extended wavelength
range (360 --
630 nm) and can convert light into changes in voltage, pH,
absorption or
refractive index. This talk will focus on a retinal protein called
bacteriorhodopsin, the proton pump of the organism
\textit{Halobacterium salinarum}. Two memories based on
this protein will be described. The first is an optical
three-dimensional
memory. This memory stores information using volume elements
(voxels), and
provides as much as a thousand-fold improvement in effective
capacity over
current technology. A unique branching reaction of a variant of
bacteriorhodopsin is used to turn each protein into an optically
addressed
latched AND gate. Although three working prototypes have been
developed, a
number of cost/performance and architectural issues must be
resolved prior
to commercialization. The major issue is that the native protein
provides a
very inefficient branching reaction. Genetic engineering has
improved
performance by nearly 500-fold, but a further order of magnitude
improvement
is needed.
Protein-based holographic associative memories will also be
discussed. The
human brain stores and retrieves information via association, and
human
intelligence is intimately connected to the nature and enormous
capacity of
this associative search and retrieval process. To a first order
approximation, creativity can be viewed as the association of two
seemingly
disparate concepts to form a totally new construct. Thus, artificial
intelligence requires large scale associative memories. Current
computer
hardware does not provide an optimal environment for creating
artificial
intelligence due to the serial nature of random access memories.
Software
cannot provide a satisfactory work-around that does not introduce
unacceptable latency. Holographic associative memories provide a
useful
approach to large scale associative recall. Bacteriorhodopsin has
long been
recognized for its outstanding holographic properties, and when
utilized in
the Paek and Psaltis design, provides a high-speed real-time
associative
memory with variable thresholding and feedback. What remains is
to make an
associative memory capable of high-speed association and
long-term data
storage. The use of directed evolution to create a protein with the
necessary unique properties will be discussed.
*Supported by NSF and DARPA.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.Y7.2