For first time, a cell built from scratch grows and divides

(quantamagazine.org)

342 points | by defrost 3 hours ago ago

96 comments

  • merksittich an hour ago

    Science News has a more balanced take, with additional quotes from peers.

    > Some have also grumbled about Adamala’s efforts to draw attention to the work, which she says was rejected by Cell after one reviewer said SpudCells were not real biology. She then sent the 190-page manuscript to journalists, under embargo, even before she had uploaded it to the preprint server bioRxiv, where her colleagues could read and assess it. She says her group will submit it to a new journal soon. ā€œIt’s an unusual way of doing things,ā€ says Kerstin Gƶpfrich, a synthetic biologist at Heidelberg University.

    https://www.science.org/content/article/lab-created-spudcell...

    • oliverx0 44 minutes ago

      Crazy that a Cell reviewer would claim synthetic biology is not biology

      • Aachen 35 minutes ago

        Exoplanets also aren't planets. Some things just seem to have definitions with a history that get applied to new discoveries that don't fall within the definition. Distinguishing random rocks in space from planets was done by requiring planets to orbit around the sun, and so planets elsewhere cannot be called planets no matter that it's 1:1 the same thing. Biology probably has a similar history of trying to draw a line somewhere between what was created and what evolved to be part of the 'natural' world

        • oliverx0 30 minutes ago

          Exoplanets are planets. Also, for clarification, biology is not defined as ā€œthe study of things produced exclusively by natural evolution.ā€ Synthetic biology works with biological components and living systems (DNA, proteins, regulatory networks, cells and organisms). It differs from much traditional biology mainly in its constructive, engineering-oriented approach. Synthetic systems are often built precisely to test hypotheses about how natural biological systems function. Claiming it is not biology is wrong IMO.

        • hparadiz 24 minutes ago

          > Exoplanets also aren't planets.

          Imagine writing this.

      • cogman10 37 minutes ago

        Well of course, it doesn't have a soul. /s

        Yeah, I have a hard time reconciling this especially since biology and biologic research often involves things like enzymes which both aren't alive and are synthetically created.

        I'm certain cell magazine has published articles on novel enzyme discovery.

    • twothreeone 14 minutes ago

      The problem is this: as an academic you tend to know the reviewer landscape within your field. You have seen this happen to a colleague before, they submitted a paper, it had interesting results - it was forcefully rejected by 1 or 2 extremely negative reviewers. The publication gets delayed, you need to wait another 6 months to get the next set of reviews. Meanwhile, some "colleague" from another lab publishes nearly identical experiments and gets slightly better results. They push onto a pre-pub server and immediately get it into a tier-1 venue. They are now state of the art. You are now merely the person reproducing original work.

      TL;DR politics breaks everything.

    • bouchard 37 minutes ago

      > ā€œIt’s an unusual way of doing things,ā€ says Kerstin Gƶpfrich, a synthetic biologist at Heidelberg University.

      That's being kind; it's a complete overreaction, simply put.

      • vintagedave 11 minutes ago

        In fairness, it's a workaround against something that likely should not have happened. Problems require creative (aka unusual) solutions.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    ā€œThis was where the field had been stuck for some time. Researchers before Adamala had figured out different ways to feed and grow synthetic cells and to replicate their DNA. But cell division is a different beast. A typical cell reorganizes its cytoskeleton — a network of protein fibers that provide structural support — to halve its DNA and split. Synthetic biologists could not figure out how to get their cells to undergo this complex process.

    So Adamala decided to ditch the cytoskeleton. One day, while tearing through the literature, she came across an interesting mechanism in a paper (opens a new tab). By attaching protein tags to a cell membrane, the synthetic biologist Reinhard Lipowsky (opens a new tab) at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces attracted other proteins to crowd around and physically bend the membrane, forcing the cell to divide. Following this approach, Adamala tweaked a cell-membrane protein and tested it in her protocells. After several tries, it worked.ā€œ

    This is the novel bit.

    • ezst 2 hours ago

      (opens a new tab)

      • khriss an hour ago

        Yeah, I was wondering about that as well. Some weird AI transcriber?

        • jmaw 26 minutes ago

          I interpreted it as the author adding some internal dialog about how they want to do more research on the article/person in question so they were opening up a new tab so they could learn more. But I can see how this could certainly be some copy/paste artifact.

        • kridsdale1 an hour ago

          More likely stuff that gets picked up when you copy and paste. I’ve seen that happen in the Google Chat electron app.

        • satvikpendem an hour ago

          Maybe an accessibility feature for TTS or blind users?

          • sourpanda 16 minutes ago

            that's exactly it, not AI at all. If you inspect any link in the article it shows it as screen-reader-text

  • ahmedfromtunis 41 minutes ago

    You stumble upon a news article from 2226. You read it to see who, between Google, OpenAI and Anthropic, won the AI race.

    Instead, your learn Biotic.

    It's now the leading polity in the solar system and its environs. It bought Alphabet, OpenAI and Anthropic in a single day back in 2084.

    Human are no longer desired. Their reproduction is capped to an optimal minimum assuring the survival of the species as a relic.

    For productive matters, Biotec preferes to rely on its biomachines. Imagine drones giving birth to offspring when traffic is at a peak. It takes more energy, sure. But no factory, nor workers are needed.

    If left alone, machines would multiply out of control, instead of rotting to waste like in the olden days.

  • burnte 3 hours ago

    Interesting that this is led by the same Dr. Kate Adamala who ended the right-handed-proteins experiment a couple of years ago. Given how close she was I'm not surprised she's made this work.

  • Animats 5 minutes ago

    Craig Venter wanted to do this. But he died earlier this year.

  • oliverx0 an hour ago

    If anyone is interested in the actual manuscript, here it is: https://www.biotic.org/research/spudcell/spudcell-manuscript...

  • blorbthrow 17 minutes ago

    > 'Unlike living natural cells... the synthetic SpudCell can't survive and replicate without feeding on external food and ribosomes'

    So in the future when there's a lab leak from the Wuhan Institute of SpudCellular Biology, the SpudCells will devour all biological life they can in order to harvest the building blocks they need. "Just social distance and wear two masks," the Surgeon General tells the CNN correspondent, as he disolves to red gray goo on live TV.

  • srean an hour ago

    Waiting for lab-grown meat. Hope it comes closer to fruition before my kidneys give out.

    • dehrmann 34 minutes ago

      There are multiple FDA-approved lab-grown meats on the market. You can literally go to a handful of restaurants and order lab-grown meat today. The production process is just expensive and it's getting scaled out.

      • srean 31 minutes ago

        Yes. It's still quite a distance away from a feel and taste of meat. At least the affordable ones.

    • adrianN 33 minutes ago

      Lab-grown meat seems completely unrelated to synthetic biology. For lab grown meat the problem to my knowledge is that it is very expensive to grow vertebrate cells in the absence of an immune system because every contamination kills the batch.

    • DesiLurker an hour ago

      let me put it this way .. it will come before the wallet gives out! (for masses)

  • Tenoke an hour ago

    This is great, I assumed we were getting close (and not quite there), so it's great to see the progress. The path from here to building a single-celled organism out of nonlive materials looks very straight.

  • bensyverson 3 hours ago

    > ā€œIt’s a big step forward to this holy grail of making a living thing out of dead components,ā€ said Sijbren Otto, a systems chemist at the Stratingh Institute for Chemistry in the Netherlands who was not involved in the work.

    That is the holy grail? I get that the goal is to "grow" biofuels, plastic, fertilizer, drugs, or whatever else we can imagine. But is that worth the many apocalyptic sci-fi outcomes we can imagine?

    • arjie 2 hours ago

      Yes, mechanically constructing life would be absolutely stupendous for science. The real tragedy of modern sci-fi is that everyone read the books and decided it was reality.

      ā€œPenicillin?! A poison from fungus that kills living cells?! Haven’t you played the sci fi game The Last of Us?ā€

      Stories are stories, man. Story-logic is biased towards interesting tales. And ā€œdiscovery from the natural world turned to human aims with great resultsā€ is uninteresting because we do amazing things these days.

      • senkora 5 minutes ago

        > Stories are stories, man. Story-logic is biased towards interesting tales.

        Also known as the fallacy of ā€œgeneralizing from fictional evidenceā€.

        https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/rHBdcHGLJ7KvLJQPk/the-logica...

      • dbingham an hour ago

        I think the issue is that those stories are rooted very much in the failures of human systems that we see every day. They are us imagining what could go wrong based on what has gone wrong and is going wrong.

        It would be a lot easier to set those warnings aside if we didn't have so many examples of the very things they warn about happening in real life.

        We currently have a system where private individuals can fund private science and then deploy the results globally to their own profit with very few mechanisms for enforcing restraint and caution. And we've seen this backfire with horrific consequences over and over again.

        Lead in the gasoline. Microplastics in the water. Pesticides widely applied to the biosphere. In my area PCBs are a massive risk due to past soil contamination. In other areas fracking biproducts make the water undrinkable.

        Hell the AI rush in the face of climate change. We literally have heatwaves killing massive numbers of people while a tiny handful of investors and the companies they control are drastically increasing our carbon emissions in the race for AI.

        It's easy to imagine all the ways in which synthetic life could go horribly wrong, even with out those sci-fi stories, especially since all but the youngest of us have been through a brutal pandemic in living memory.

        It's very, very hard to imagine our current system showing proper restraint with this technology.

        • Zambyte 44 minutes ago

          It's important to emphasize that cars are the leading source of carbon emissions. Anyone fighting against AI on the basis of climate change should be fighting for safe and reliable alternatives to driving everywhere.

          • flurpitude 22 minutes ago

            Should also be fighting for that.

          • CamperBob2 15 minutes ago

            And the most promising of those alternatives is, ironically enough, AI itself. Fighting data centers is literally like fighting nuclear power. If you just want more carbon emissions, then by all means, proceed.

            Of course most people who commute to work don't need to be doing that now, but that's the other big elephant in the room with AI. We don't use the intelligence we already have, so what makes us think the emergence of ASI/AGI will change anything?

    • mattlondon an hour ago

      > That is the holy grail?

      At one end we're creating artificial life, the other we are creating artificial intelligence.

      We're coming at everything we as the human race have known for millennia from both ends, simultaneously. We're recreating that, from scratch.

      That is absolutely fucking wild.

      Ironically this "holy" grail will end up being the thing that finally puts religious creation myths in their place (i.e. as bullshit) since we will be able to answer with 100% certainty that we are not alone or unique in the universe since we recreated life in the fucking petri dish so why not across the billions and trillions of other planets out there?

      What a time to be alive.

      • yreg an hour ago

        > we will be able to answer with 100% certainty that we are not alone or unique in the universe since we recreated life in the fucking petri dish

        I don't think we are alone, but this is not logically sound. The conditions in the petri dish might be easily so special that their natural prevalence is < 1 per universe.

        • gmueckl 8 minutes ago

          The first time this happens in a petri dish will likely have to be under extremely controlled circumstances. But the process will be modified and toyed with once it exists and I think that this will eventually lead to whole spectrum of (quasi?)biological systems that together cover a broad range of environmental conditions.

      • el_io an hour ago

        You if believe creating life will end religion then you're wrong.

        We thought evolutionary theory would do the same, now we got people who believe god directed evolution. Some believe everything evolved from a common ancestor except Humans.

        So the believers will adapt to believe that Genesis was talking about exactly this.

        • graemep 7 minutes ago

          Who thought evolutionary theory would end religion? Sounds like wishful thinking from people who were hoping for an end to religion.

          Mainstream Christianity was not not biblical literalist anyway. Read what Augustine or Origan had to say about interpreting Genesis.

        • ZenoArrow an hour ago

          Science can't disprove religion. Consider the "big bang", is that any less of a miracle than "God did it"? Science is like "just give us one miracle and we'll explain the rest".

          • groceries8192 30 minutes ago

            The big bang theory isn't even incompatible with the idea that 'God did it'; the idea was first proposed by a Catholic priest, as a matter of fact! I think the anti-science stance of evangelicals has eclipsed in the modern consciousness the fact that modern science owes much to the Catholic church.

            > This startling idea first appeared in scientific form in 1931, in a paper by Georges LemaƮtre, a Belgian cosmologist and Catholic priest.

            excerpt from https://www.amnh.org/learn-teach/curriculum-collections/cosm...

          • nathan_compton 11 minutes ago

            I think this is really the wrong framing. Science can't disprove religion. The question is whether it makes any sense to believe in the religion in the first place, given what observation and science say about the universe. Science can't prove that God didn't create the universe a nano-second ago in exactly the state to produce this temporal evolution, but no one believes that because its not explanatory and also fails a bunch of other, not-necessarily scientific, but rationally motivated epistemological tests.

            The way I see this is that science cannot disprove any particular religion, but it can probably offer more compelling explanations for the state of the world than religion can offer. People haven't flocked away from religion because explanations for the state of the world aren't really what people want from religion. They want a sop for their anxieties. they want community, etc. I think believing in nonsense is a real shitty way to get these things, but I'm not most people.

      • kilobaud an hour ago

        (Disclaimer: on religion I try to be respectful, as an agnostic atheist) I do think our ability to ā€œbuild tools that create lifeā€ is incredible, but to me has a limited argumentative impact on what I guess you could call the ā€œprime moverā€ question: _But how did everything start?_ Does that seem reasonable or am I downplaying the implications you mentioned?

      • system33- an hour ago

        Nah. The natural pivot is from ā€œwe have never observed abiogenesisā€ to ā€œsee? Life required a creator.ā€

        You can’t win

        • groceries8192 25 minutes ago

          Thomas Aquinas made the argument that all life comes from other life in the 13th Century. I wouldn't classify it as a modern pivot so much as one of the central philosophical arguments for the existence of a Creator.

        • Windchaser 24 minutes ago

          Aye, but this will let us gradually work towards more and more basic cell forms, so that we can eventually figure out abiogenesis.

      • namero999 10 minutes ago

        I might in some sense agree with you but check your wording: creationism... we recreated life... see where I'm going?

      • AndrewKemendo an hour ago

        That’s because we’re almost to the Technological Singularity

        Kurzweil puts it between 2029-2032 and that seems right to me

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technological_singularity

      • tsunamifury an hour ago

        Wait you think creating life disapproves creationism?

        I’m no 7 day creationist but haha my guy…

    • TSiege 2 hours ago

      I'm not a biologist so I can't say for sure, but it seems like it would be a lot easier to edit an existing living organism to produce those products than it would be to create completely from scratch. We already do this with the process known as precision fermentation. We've gotten very good at editing genomes via CRISPR and related techniques and are only getting better

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision_fermentation

      • senkora 2 hours ago

        It seems like this cell barely evolves, because the system they built for duplicating the DNA makes very few errors.

        Natural life tends to evolve, which may have consequences for production.

        For example, quorn production has to be restarted from a seed population after ~1000 hours because it tends to evolve colonial variants that break the product standards: https://www.davidmoore.org.uk/21st_century_guidebook_to_fung...

        • TSiege 2 hours ago

          Very interesting! Thanks for sharing

      • PaulHoule 2 hours ago

        It's desirable to have some kind of simple base to start from that is an easy-to-configure platform to deploy any kind of metabolic machinery.

        Their "minimal" cell is not quite a minimum product because it depends on prebuilt ribosomes and can't reproduce on it's own. No danger of gray goo!

        This is more like it

        https://www.jcvi.org/research/first-minimal-synthetic-bacter...

        but those guys could probably add components to their cell to make it truly self-supporting although in biology there is a big difference between "barely works" and "high performance"

      • colordrops 2 hours ago

        It seems that eventually you could build much more flexible and powerful if you build from scratch. Hacking existing cells is a shortcut but longer term we may get grey goo.

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > That is the holy grail?

      If you can disassemble and reassemble a thing, you can say you understand it. Not perfectly. But understand it. I’d imagine properly understanding rudimentary cellular biology will come with perks.

      (Also, does the Holy Grail imply both a boon and a cost? Or is that just Indian Jones.)

      • tialaramex 2 hours ago

        To your aside: No, in this abstract sense Holy Grails are just a boon, a desirable piece of knowledge, achievement, that sort of thing.

    • yread 2 hours ago

      I think one useful application of this would be life built on stuff that doesn't interact with our cells - artifical bases, nucleotides and all. Then we could have non-biological self-replicating robots

    • adrian_b 2 hours ago

      While this is an impressive step forward, there remains an extremely long way, probably of several decades, until being able to design and synthesize a cell comparable in complexity with a bacterium.

      The thing that they made is more alive than a crystal, which when placed in a suitable solution will grow and reproduce its own structure, but much less alive than even the simplest known living cells.

      Its "life" is similar to that of a brain-dead human, whose body is not left to die by a bunch of machines that pump air into its lungs and nutrients through its blood vessels.

      The techniques developed to make this pseudo-cell might evolve eventually into techniques able to make a true cell and it is likely that valuable information can be extracted from experiments with it, but it is very unlikely that any of the ancestors of the living beings has ever had even a remote resemblance with this (because it is far too dependent on continuously receiving complex cellular components and nutrients from outside; simplified parasitic living beings could appear only when there already existed sufficiently complex living hosts for the parasites).

      Some components of this thing are growing by reproducing themselves, but like I have said, so does any crystal, thus it is difficult to choose a criterion that will distinguish with certainty what is living from what is non-living.

      The growth is followed by a kind of division into 2 vesicles, but that happens by a mechanism very different from any living cell. Many inorganic things will split when growing over a certain size, so again it is hard to decide whether this can be called living.

      • danans 2 hours ago

        > Its "life" is similar to that of a brain-dead human, whose body is not left to die by a bunch of machines that pump air into its lungs and nutrients through its blood vessels

        A brain-dead human is alive, but just facing systemic collapse, aka death. That's not to imply that what the scientists here have created is alive, but the comparison isn't so apt.

        • adrian_b 30 minutes ago

          As a multi-cellular organism, a brain-dead human is not alive, even if most of its cells may remain alive as long as they are fed from outside.

          OK, what I have said above is not generally true, as some brain-dead humans may be more alive than others, e.g. some integrative functions, like some feedback loops that function through the endocrine system or through the autonomous nervous system, may still be working, connecting some organs with each other.

          My comparison was with a very dead brain-dead human, who was reduced to the equivalent of a tissue culture.

          These artificial cells also have some components that continue to work like in a living cell, doing some nucleic acid replication and some protein and lipid synthesis from precursors provided from outside, but they lack the capability to perform many of the chemical reactions that would be needed to close the complex network of feedback loops that enable a true living cell to live autonomously.

    • dukeofdoom an hour ago

      Yeah, imagine if one day it will become trivial to blow up the world. Enough people hate humanity that they would do it, by tomorrow if they could. Seems like out exponential growth in technology will eventually lead up to that. If not actual nuclear explosion, then biological weapons. Would we need to enslave humans not to do it. How would that work.

      • iwontberude an hour ago

        I agree with your conclusion. We start by enslaving certain classes of humans like Peter Thiel or Elon Musk. Anyone with more than $1B gets the collar. Populism is a helluva drug.

    • fouc 2 hours ago

      Have you not seen Jurassic Park?

    • Legend2440 2 hours ago

      Man, I am so tired of the cynicism around here.

      Anytime you do something interesting or useful someone accuses you of trying to build the apocalypse.

  • netfortius 19 minutes ago

    Reminded me of Maturana and his autopoiesis.

  • mghackerlady 2 hours ago

    I wonder if these principles could be applied to non-organic components. I imagine a completely synthetic robo-cell would raise interesting questions.

    Also, go MN!

  • small_model 2 hours ago

    The aliens that seeded life on Earth are seeing us making baby steps. Expect a visit soon!

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > aliens that seeded life on Earth are seeing us making baby steps

      Or like a grad student didn’t dispose of their work properly and are desperately trying to distract from their scandal.

      • manIliketea an hour ago

        I vastly prefer the explanation like of Roadside Picnic. They didn't try to create us, they don't care that we're here, and, ultimately, we will never be able to know them in any meaningful sense. ;)

    • r0m4n0 an hour ago

      Or another take, life isn't all that special if we can make it this easily.

      We have always theorized the start of life but this could actively show that life could have started on a rock floating in space given enough time. No sky daddy and no aliens necessary!

    • germandiago an hour ago

      I never thought of it this way... who knows, could be a possibility! Oh, this is creepy...

    • aerodexis 2 hours ago

      It's rare to see posts like this with such pure, crystalized ideology.

      • LogicFailsMe an hour ago

        Just wait 'til he finds out the alien was Trelane and he just wanted more soldiers for his play army.

  • october8140 an hour ago

    This is really cool. But I dislike the dialog where because step 1 happened people talk like steps 2-100 are not inevitable.

  • quux 2 hours ago
  • somelamer567 28 minutes ago

    So what is being described here? Scratch-built self-replicating nano-machines inspired by biology? That itself seems significant.

  • humanfromearth9 2 hours ago

    I wonder what animal or plant would grow out of that...

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      Neither. This is a single cell.

      Replicating eukaryogenesis with synthetic components is something I hope to see in my lifetime.

  • deadbabe 2 hours ago

    Going by people’s reactions to AI, what will our reactions be to artificial humans generated from these methods?

    Will they be hated? Killed off? Will they ever be see as legitimate, or just soulless beings, p-zombies.

    • vhantz an hour ago

      From cells dividing to human generation there is a single step.

      Similarly a program that runs on a computer, where its only interactions are strings of numbers is the same as an entity having to interact with the world.

      • deadbabe an hour ago

        Interesting, we should be able to have LLMs generate full genetic code or Inpaint into existing code that can be installed into a cell as DNA and have it divide out into any custom creature.

        We could launch these custom bacteria in stasis to planets around the galaxy and seed life everywhere.

  • HanClinto 2 hours ago

    "If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe"

    • bell-cot 2 hours ago

      "And that is why God is far less interested in modern mortal affairs than Theists want Him to be." - [source forgotten]

  • joh6nn 2 hours ago

    For the love of all things holy, can we not do these kinds of experiments on the same planet we live on?

    • dyauspitr 2 hours ago

      Oh shut up, can we get some frontier stuff going without some doom and gloom. All this knowledge for all these years and next to no progress.

    • snapcaster 2 hours ago

      I blame black mirror for this attitude. If you're going to speculate on imaginary futures why can't they be positive?

      • qsera an hour ago

        >why can't they be positive?

        Because no one minds if good things happen...

  • oytis an hour ago

    Uh-oh

  • germandiago an hour ago

    That is closer to consciousness than AI will ever be. :)

    • namero999 4 minutes ago

      Definitely. An implication of several strands of idealism is that we will be able to create artificial life (with consciousness)... it will just look like biology.

    • red75prime an hour ago

      Elan conscietal? (a pun on elan vital)

  • 1-6 an hour ago

    "The cell is not alive by any definition..." "But it’s the strongest demonstration yet that it is possible to generate life from nonlife."

    Contradicting themself in the same paragraph.

    • tsunamifury an hour ago

      The wheel is not a car. However a wheel is a strong indication that car-like structures are at least possible.