Bioengineers at Stanford University
have created the first biological transistor made from genetic materials: DNA
and RNA. Dubbed the “transcriptor,” this biological transistor is the final
component required to build biological computers that operate inside living
cells. We are now tantalizingly close to biological computers that can detect
changes in a cell’s environment, store a record of that change in memory made
of DNA, and then trigger some kind of response — say, commanding a cell to stop
producing insulin, or to self-destruct if cancer is detected.
Like a transistor, which enables a
small current to turn on a larger one, one of the key functions of
transcriptors is signal amplification. A tiny change in the enzyme’s activity
(the transcriptor’s gate) can cause a very large change in the two connected
genes (the channel). By combining multiple transcriptors, the Stanford
researchers have created a full suite of Boolean Integrase Logic (BIL) gates —
the biological equivalent of AND, NAND, OR, XOR, NOR, and XNOR logic gates.
With these BIL gates (pun possibly intended), a biological computer could
perform almost computation inside a living cell.
You need more than just BIL gates to
make a computer, though. You also need somewhere to store data (memory, RAM),
and some way to connect all of the transcriptors and memory together (a bus).
Fortunately, as we’ve covered a few times before, numerous research groups have
successfully stored data in DNA — and Stanford has already developed an
ingenious method of using the M13 virus to transmit strands of DNA between
cells. (See: Harvard cracks DNA storage, crams 700 terabytes of
data into a single gram.) In short, all of the building blocks of a
biological computer are now in place.
This isn’t to say that highly
functional biological computers will arrive in short order, but we should
certainly begin to see simple biological sensors that measure and record
changes in a cell’s environment. Stanford has contributed the BIL gate design
to the public domain, which should allow other research institutes, such as
Harvard’s Wyss Institute, to also begin work on the first biological computer.
(See: The quest for the $1000 genome.)
Moving forward, though, the potential
for real biological computers is immense. We are essentially talking about
fully-functional computers that can sense their surroundings, and then
manipulate their host cells into doing just about anything. Biological
computers might be used as an early-warning system for disease, or simply as a
diagnostic tool (has the patient consumed excess amounts of sugar, even after
the doctor told them not to?) Biological computers could tell their host cells
to stop producing insulin, to pump out more adrenaline, to reproduce some
healthy cells to combat disease, or to stop reproducing if cancer is detected.
Biological computers will probably obviate the use of many pharmaceutical drugs.
Source: extremetech
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