Automation in biotechnology – active ingredient analysis on brain tissue
Abstract
Purpose
Introduction of an automated laboratory system for a new field of laboratory operation, namely cultivation and handling of live brain tissue.
Design/methodology/approach
The company's expertise in manual throughput was transferred to automatable methods. Processing data is used for scheduling purposes to yield efficient production of results.
Findings
Automated process has comparable survival rates and high reproducibility. Time tolerance is lower than for manual operation.
Research limitations/implications
Several bottle necks of the system have been identified and are to be improved upon in future research. These are especially “handling of membrane inserts” and slow‐running procedures.
Practical implications
Cataloging of activity data (timestamps, parameters, etc.) allows for much easier statistical analysis and data‐mining than with manual operation data.
Originality/value
Tissue‐based, high‐throughput screening is a seminal field in laboratory automation.
Keywords
Citation
Hortig, J., Boehme, T., Felsch, T. and Elkmann, N. (2005), "Automation in biotechnology – active ingredient analysis on brain tissue", Sensor Review, Vol. 25 No. 4, pp. 292-294. https://doi.org/10.1108/02602280510620835
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2005, Emerald Group Publishing Limited