Hindustan Times (Delhi)

World’s smallest tape recorder built from bacteria

- Press Trust of India

NEW YORK: Researcher­s have converted a natural bacterial immune system into the world’s smallest data recorder, laying the groundwork for a new class of technologi­es that use bacterial cells for everything from disease diagnosis to environmen­tal monitoring.

The researcher­s at the Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) in the US modified an ordinary laboratory strain of the ubiquitous human gut microbe Escherichi­a coli, enabling the bacteria to not only record their interactio­ns with the environmen­t but also time-stamp the events.

“Such bacteria, swallowed by a patient, might be able to record the changes they experience through the whole digestive tract, yielding an unpreceden­ted view of previously inaccessib­le phenomena,” said Harris Wang from the CUMC.

Other applicatio­ns could include environmen­tal sensing and basic studies in ecology and microbiolo­gy, where bacteria could monitor otherwise invisible changes without disrupting their surroundin­gs, according to the study published in the journal Science.

Wang and his team created the micro- scopic data recorder by taking advantage of CRISPR-CAS, an immune system in many species of bacteria. CRISPR-CAS copies snippets of DNA from invading viruses so that subsequent generation­s of bacteria can repel these pathogens more effectivel­y.

As a result, the CRISPR locus of the bacterial genome accumulate­s a chronologi­cal record of the bacterial viruses that it and its ancestors have survived. When those same viruses try to infect again, the CRISPR-CAS system can recognise and eliminate them.

“Now we are planning to look at various markers that might be altered under changes in natural or disease states, in the gastrointe­stinal system or elsewhere,” said Wang. Synthetic biologists have previously used CRISPR to store poems, books, and images in DNA, but this is the first time CRISPR has been used to record cellular activity and the timing of those events.

 ??  ?? The developmen­t could lead to technologi­es that harness bacterial cells for disease diagnosis (COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY)
The developmen­t could lead to technologi­es that harness bacterial cells for disease diagnosis (COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY)

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