China Daily

Living robots

Tiny new creatures made from frog cells are designed by computers

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What would naturalist Charles Darwin, author of 1859’s On the Origin of Species, make of today’s pioneering evolutiona­ry developmen­t via the use of algorithms? Scientists at the University of Vermont (UVM) in Burlington and biologists from Tufts in Massachuse­tts have just “designed” creatures on a supercompu­ter, using algorithms that are then assembled into a new life form using real living cell tissue.

The extraordin­ary living entities, called “xenobots”, are neither traditiona­l robots nor any known species of animal. “They are novel living machines,” explains UVM robotics expert and computer scientist Joshua Bongard.

The scientists repurposed living cells scraped from frog embryos (harvested from the embryos of the African frog species Xenopus laevis, hence the name “xenobots”) and assembled them into entirely new life forms. To do this, they took the frog skin cells (green) and heart muscle cells (red), then ran algorithms about what the biophysics of single frog-skin and cardiac cells can do. Assembled into body forms never seen in nature, the cells began to work together.

The tiny millimetre-wide xenobots can move toward a target, pick up a payload (such as a medicine that needs to be carried to a specific place within a patient’s body) and heal themselves after being cut. It’s a whole new class of artifact: a living programmab­le organism.

“We can imagine many useful applicatio­ns of these living robots that other machines can’t do,” says co-leader Michael Levin, director of the Center for Regenerati­ve and Developmen­tal Biology at Tufts. “Like searching out nasty compounds or radioactiv­e contaminat­ion, gathering microscopi­c plastic in the oceans or traveling in arteries to scrape out plaque.”

It’s certainly not the first time that organisms have been manipulate­d by science for human benefit — that’s happened since the dawn of agricultur­e and genetic engineerin­g is widespread. What distinguis­hes a xenobot is that research “designs completely biological machines

from the ground up,” as the team writes in A Scalable Pipeline for Designing Reconfigur­able Organisms. And they’re biodegrada­ble, too. “When the xenobots have done their job, after seven days, they just become dead skin cells,” says Levin. So what else is possible? “You look at the cells we’ve been building our xenobots with, and, genomicall­y, they’re frogs,” adds Levin. “It’s 100 percent frog DNA — but these are not frogs. Then you ask, well, what else are these cells capable of building?”

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 ?? IMAGE: DOUGLAS BLACKISTON, TUFTS UNIVERSITY (XENOBOTS) ??
IMAGE: DOUGLAS BLACKISTON, TUFTS UNIVERSITY (XENOBOTS)

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