Showing posts with label Mary Shelley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Shelley. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2020

Synthetic life, is it possible?

Frankenstein's monster
In the previous two posts in this series we have seen that the generation of synthetic life in the laboratory is probably a process more difficult than some optimists imagine.



Let’s look at one of the latest experiments in synthetic biology: George Church and Nili Ostrov, Harvard biologists, are trying to build a strain of the bacterium Escherichia coli immune to all existing viruses. How? By changing its genetic code so that viruses do not understand it and cannot use the bacterial cellular machinery to reproduce. Since the genetic code is redundant, it is possible to replace one of the codons encoding the amino acid arginine (AGA) with another that also encodes the same amino acid (CGC), and all the genes of the bacterium would go on generating the same proteins. This would be done with several rare codons. But since viruses would continue to use the substituted codons, the bacterial cell machinery would no longer be able to understand the DNA of the virus. This part of the job is almost finished. When it is done, it would also be necessary to eliminate the transfer RNAs of the missing codons and ensure that they are not remanufactured, so that the cellular machinery can no longer use them.
Note that the work done so far is the manipulation of the data recorded in the DNA. It is equivalent to changing the information contained in the hard disk of a computer so that it stops using a certain instruction of the language of the machine, by replacing it with another equivalent instruction. We are still very far from synthetic biology in the strict sense. Will it be possible to synthesize life in the near future?