PDA

View Full Version : Geneticist Craig Venter creates world's first artificial life



Twisted Titan
20th May 2010, 11:32 AM
Geneticist Craig Venter creates world's first artificial life


http://www.news.com.au/world/geneticist-craig-venter-creates-first-artificial-life/story-e6frfkyi-1225869402429



A GENETICIST has delivered on a promise he made 15 years ago: to create the world's first artificial life, a cell controlled by DNA built from scratch in the laboratory.

"This is an important step, we think, both scientifically and philosophically," Dr Venter said. "It's certainly changed my views of the definitions of life and how life works."

The advance - reported in the journal Science - is, literally, living proof that designer microbes can be built for special jobs, such as producing biofuels and pharmaceuticals or removing pollutants from water or air.

"This is the first synthetic cell that's been made and we call it synthetic because the cell is totally derived from a synthetic (gene-bearing) chromosome, made with four bottles of chemicals on a chemical synthesiser, starting with information in a computer," Dr Venter said.



He has applied for patents on the process, assigning them to his company Synthetic Genomics, which helped fund the research.

John Mattick, Australian Research Council Fellow at Queensland University's Institute for Molecular Bioscience in Brisbane, said: "It's a technical tour de force."

Dr Venter and his team had already proved they could synthesise a bacterial genome and, separately, could transplant the genome of one bacterium into another.

Now they have synthesised the genome of a bacterium called Mycoplasma mycoides, transplanted it into another bacterium, M. capricolum, and watched as the artificial genes booted up the recipient cell to produce M. mycoides biochemical products called proteins.


How scientists created the first artifical life

1. Decode DNA from a bacterium (single-celled organism), in this case Mycoplasma mycoides

2. Synthetically create the DNA of the bacterium in the lab and add a "watermark" to distinguish it from real DNA

3. Transplant the artificial DNA into a living bacterium (in this case Mycoplasma capricolum) with its own authentic DNA

4. Allow the bacterium, which now contains artificial and authentic DNA, to divide and create "daughter" bacteria, some of which contain artifical DNA and others that contain authentic DNA

5. Add an antibiotic that kills the bacteria with authentic DNA, but not the bacteria with artificial DNA

6. Allow the artifical bacteria to produce proteins

RESULT: The artificial DNA produce proteins from the original bacterium, the Mycoplasma mycoides, qualifying as the world's first artificial cell

Fudup
20th May 2010, 11:47 AM
From the look of the description, he is changing the dna of a living organism, not creating life. We may be able to duplicate the dna, but we cannot create something truly "alive".

bellevuebully
20th May 2010, 11:58 AM
From the look of the description, he is changing the dna of a living organism, not creating life. We may be able to duplicate the dna, but we cannot create something truly "alive".


Shhhhhhhhhh........you'll mislead people from this misleading propaganda.

Reminds me of a joke I heard once.....

a couple of scientists go to God and say they have discovered how to create life. God says..."wonderful, lets see what you've got".

One of the scientists says sure, and bends down to scoop up a handfull of dirt to start the demonstration with.....at which point God says...."hold on a minute, that is my dirt."

Carbon
20th May 2010, 12:24 PM
How scientists created the first artifical life

1. Decode DNA from a bacterium (single-celled organism), in this case Mycoplasma mycoides

2. Synthetically create the DNA of the bacterium in the lab and add a "watermark" to distinguish it from real DNA

3. Transplant the artificial DNA into a living bacterium (in this case Mycoplasma capricolum) with its own authentic DNA

4. Allow the bacterium, which now contains artificial and authentic DNA, to divide and create "daughter" bacteria, some of which contain artifical DNA and others that contain authentic DNA

5. Add an antibiotic that kills the bacteria with authentic DNA, but not the bacteria with artificial DNA

6. Allow the artifical bacteria to produce proteins

RESULT: The artificial DNA produce proteins from the original bacterium, the Mycoplasma mycoides, qualifying as the world's first artificial cell[/i]





Bacteria Genomes - MYCOPLASMA MYCOIDES (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/2can/genomes/bacteria/Mycoplasma_mycoides.html)
Mycoplasma mycoides is the etiological agent of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP)

Mycoplasma is a genus of small bacteria which lack cell walls. Mycoplasma m. spp. mycoides is best known as the cause of bovine contagious pleuropneumonia (CBPP), a highly destructive disease in bovine cattle that is the only bacterial disease included in the World Organization for Animal Health's A-list of prioritised communicable animal diseases.

CBPP is predominantly a disease of the genus Bos; both bovine and zebu cattle are naturally infected. There are many reported breed differences with respect to susceptibility. In general, European breeds tend to be more susceptible than indigenous African breeds. In zoos the infection has been recorded in bison and yak and it has also been known to cause severe disease in goats.

CBPP is endemic in most of Africa. It is a problem in parts of Asia, especially India and China. Periodically, CBPP occurs in Europe, and outbreaks within the last decade have occurred in Spain, Portugal, and Italy. Contagious bovine pleuropneumonia was eradicated from the United States in the nineteenth century.

The clinical symptoms of acute CBPP involve respiratory distress, cough, cessation of rumination, anorexia, and severe pleuritic pain. The disease is spread by inhalation of droplets from an infected, coughing animal. Consequently, relatively close contact is required for transmission to occur. Outbreaks usually begin as the result of movement of an infected animal into a naive herd. The mortality rate is quite varied and ranges from 10 to 70 percent.

Mycoplasma m. spp. mycoides is the first bacterium that causes a severe disease in livestock whose genome has been sequenced. Knowledge of this genome sequence will help facilitate the development of new vaccines, drugs, and diagnostic tools for CBPP. Because this is the first genome that has been sequenced in the Spiroplasma group of the mollicutes, it will serve as a good complement to the five previously published mollicute genomes for the study of the evolution of the mollicutes. ( M genitalium, M. pneumoniae, Ureaplasma parvum (formerly Ureaplasma urealyticum) and M. penetrans.




Anyone else see the potential for big problems here?

madfranks
20th May 2010, 12:24 PM
5. Add an antibiotic that kills the bacteria with authentic DNA, but not the bacteria with artificial DNA

To me this is the most scary thing about this whole article. How long till they create synthesized diseases which target only the DNA of selected people? Think of what they can do with this now: Say they release an engineered disease that targets regular human DNA and only those who take the special DNA altering vaccines will survive. They'll look like heroes to the sheep while the resisters and dissidents will succumb to the disease which attacks "authentic DNA". Holy moly! :o

iOWNme
20th May 2010, 12:43 PM
Man is and will forever be his own worst enemy.


"We are fucked" - me

Ash_Williams
20th May 2010, 01:24 PM
That's incredible if true, that they can build DNA.

Sometimes these articles turn to be BS though.

Hermie
20th May 2010, 01:46 PM
From the look of the description, he is changing the dna of a living organism, not creating life. We may be able to duplicate the dna, but we cannot create something truly "alive".


That's what I noticed too.
Certainly isn't "creating life".

Twisted Titan
20th May 2010, 02:00 PM
5. Add an antibiotic that kills the bacteria with authentic DNA, but not the bacteria with artificial DNA

To me this is the most scary thing about this whole article. How long till they create synthesized diseases which target only the DNA of selected people? Think of what they can do with this now: Say they release an engineered disease that targets regular human DNA and only those who take the special DNA altering vaccines will survive. They'll look like heroes to the sheep while the resisters and dissidents will succumb to the disease which attacks "authentic DNA". Holy moly! :o



There is nothing that Patriots can do save to Keeep Stacking and packing.

The rest will take care of itself

T

Neuro
20th May 2010, 02:41 PM
They are genetically engineering anti-biotic resistant/immune bacteria to kill cattle! Get out the pitchforks!

Gknowmx
20th May 2010, 04:15 PM
http://www.the-scientist.com/2010/5/1/44/1/

You ("you" being a life science researcher) may soon be visited by an FBI agent, or a scientist acting on behalf of one. Here's why....

Argentium
20th May 2010, 05:59 PM
This doesn't even come close to "artificial" life in my book. When they make an artificial ribosome and the biological machinery needed for metabolism, give me a call.

EE_
20th May 2010, 06:24 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xos2MnVxe-c