作者nfsong (图书馆我来了)
标题[转录][爆卦] 人造细菌,创造出新的生命!!
时间Sat May 29 20:38:49 2010
※ [本文转录自 nfsong 信箱]
作者: dearevan (归去,也无风雨也无晴) 看板: Gossiping
标题: [爆卦] 人造细菌,创造出新的生命!!
时间: Fri May 21 02:43:40 2010
刚刚隔壁实验室的学长跑来串门子闲聊学术上的事情
他突然提到今天在Science的网站上看到一篇很有趣的文章
Daniel G. Gibson 与J. Craig Venter
完全只利用基本化学物质材料, 合成打造出一种细菌
就某种意义上来说, 等於是人造生命的开端
这消息真的蛮让人震惊的
那学长还很失落说他本来想当第一个做出人造生命的人
以下是science网站的新闻稿 以及原始文献出处
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/science.1190719
(原始文献)
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/328/5981/958/F1
(合成细菌的电显照片)
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/328/5981/958
(新闻稿)
NEWS OF THE WEEK
GENOMICS:
Synthetic Genome Brings New Life to Bacterium
Elizabeth Pennisi
For 15 years, J. Craig Venter has chased a dream: to build a genome from
scratch and use it to make synthetic life. Now, he and his team at the J.
Craig Venter Institute (JCVI) in Rockville, Maryland, and San Diego,
California, say they have realized that dream. In this week's Science Express
(www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/science.1190719), they describe the
stepwise creation of a bacterial chromosome and the successful transfer of it
into a bacterium, where it replaced the native DNA. Powered by the synthetic
genome, that microbial cell began replicating and making a new set of protein
This is "a defining moment in the history of biology and biotechnology," says
Mark Bedau, a philosopher at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, and editor of
the scientific journal Artificial Life. "It represents an important technical
milestone in the new field of synthetic genomics," says yeast biologist Jef
Boeke of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
The synthetic genome created by Venter's team is almost identical to that of
a natural bacterium. It was achieved at great expense, an estimated $40
million, and effort, 20 people working for more than a decade. Despite this
success, creating heavily customized genomes, such as ones that make fuels or
pharmaceuticals, and getting them to "boot" up the same way in a cell is not
yet a reality. "There are great challenges ahead before genetic engineers can
mix, match, and fully design an organism's genome from scratch," notes Paul
Keim, a molecular geneticist at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.
The "synthetic" bacteria unveiled this week have their origins in a project
headed by Venter and JCVI colleagues Clyde Hutchison III and Hamilton Smith
to determine the minimal instructions needed for microbial life and from
there add genes that could turn a bacterium into a factory producing
compounds useful for humankind. In 1995, a team led by the trio sequenced the
600,000-base chromosome of a bacterium called Mycoplasma genitalium, the
smallest genome of a free-living organism. The microbe has about 500 genes,
and researchers found they could delete 100 individual genes without ill
effect (Science, 14 February 2003, p. 1006).
But confirming the minimal genome suggested by those experiments required
synthesizing a full bacterial chromosome and getting it to work in a
recipient cell, two steps that have taken years because the technology to
make and manipulate whole chromosomes did not exist. In 2007, Venter, Smith,
Hutchison, and colleagues finally demonstrated that they could transplant
natural chromosomes from one microbial species to another (Science, 3 August
2007, p. 632). By 2008, they showed that they could make an artificial
chromosome that matched M. genitalium's but also contained "watermark" DNA
sequences that would enable them to tell the synthetic genome from the
natural one (Science, 29 February 2008, p. 1215).
But combining those steps became bogged down, in part because M. genitalium
grows so slowly that one experiment can take weeks to complete. The team
decided to change microbes in midstream, sequencing the 1-million-base genome
of the faster-growing M. mycoides and beginning to build a synthetic copy of
its chromosome. Last year, they showed they could extract the M. mycoides
natural chromosome, place it into yeast, modify the bacterial genome, and
then transfer it to M. capricolum, a close microbial relative (Science, 21
August 2009, p. 928; 25 September 2009, p. 1693). The next step was to show
that the synthetic copy of the bacterial DNA could be handled the same way.
The researchers started building their synthetic chromosome by going DNA
shopping. They bought from a company more than 1000 1080-base sequences that
covered the whole M. mycoides genome; to facilitate their assembly in the
correct order, the ends of each sequence had 80 bases that overlapped with
its neighbors. So that the assembled genome would be recognizable as
synthetic, four of the ordered DNA sequences contained strings of bases that,
in code, spell out an e-mail address, the names of many of the people
involved in the project, and a few famous quotations.
Using yeast to assemble the synthetic DNA in stages, the researchers first
stitched together 10,000-base sequences, then 100,000-base sequences, and
finally the complete genome. However, when they initially put the synthetic
genome into M. capricolum, nothing happened. Like computer programmers
debugging faulty software, they systematically transplanted combinations of
synthetic and natural DNA, finally homing in on a single-base mistake in the
synthetic genome. The error delayed the project 3 months.
After months of unsuccessfully transplanting these various genome
combinations, the team's fortune changed about a month ago when the
biologists found a blue colony of bacteria had rapidly grown on a lab plate
over the weekend. (Blue showed the cells were using the new genome). Project
leader Daniel Gibson sent Venter a text message declaring success. "I took my
video camera in and filmed [the plate]," says Venter.
They sequenced the DNA in this colony, confirming that the bacteria had the
synthetic genome, and checked that the microbes were indeed making proteins
characteristic of M. mycoides rather than M capricolum. The colony grew like
a typical M. mycoides as well. "We clearly transformed one cell into
another," says Venter.
"That's a pretty amazing accomplishment," says Anthony Forster, a molecular
biologist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Still, he and
others emphasize that this work didn't create a truly synthetic life form,
because the genome was put into an existing cell.
At the moment, the techniques employed by Venter's team are too difficult to
appeal to any potential bioterrorists, researchers stress. Nonetheless, "this
experiment will certainly reconfigure the ethical imagination," says Paul
Rabinow, an anthropologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who
studies synthetic biology. "Over the long term, the approach will be used to
synthesize increasingly novel designed genomes," says Kenneth Oye, a social
scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. "Right
now, we are shooting in the dark as to what the long-term benefits and
long-term risks will be."
As ever more "artificial" life comes into reach, regulatory agencies will
need to establish the proper regulations in a timely fashion, adds Oye. "The
possibility of misuse unfortunately exists," says Eckard Wimmer of Stony
Brook University in New York state, who led a team that in 2002 created the
first synthetic virus (Science, 9 August 2002, p. 1016).
Venter says that JCVI has applied for several patents covering the work,
assigning them to his company, Synthetic Genomics, which provided much of the
funding for the project. A technology watchdog group, ETC Group in Ottawa,
has argued that these actions could result in a monopoly on synthesized life
(Science, 15 June 2007, p. 1557), but others are not worried. Given the
current climate for granting and upholding patents of this type, says Oye,
"it is unlikely that Synthetic Genomics will become the Microsoft of
synthetic biology."
"One thing is sure," Boeke says. "Interesting creatures will be bubbling out
of the Venter Institute's labs."
--
http://www.wretch.cc/blog/dearevan
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※ 发信站: 批踢踢实业坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 159.237.151.158
1F:→ valenci:好神奇 05/21 02:44
2F:→ valenci:基本化学物质材料, 合成打造出一种细菌 05/21 02:44
3F:→ MJdavid:原来如此 05/21 02:45
4F:推 christofer:细菌会吃掉人类 然後统治地球 05/21 02:45
5F:推 Taifon:我的屌就可以创造出新生命 谢谢 05/21 02:45
6F:→ valenci:生命起源说 05/21 02:45
7F:推 higreater:@o@ 真神... 05/21 02:45
8F:推 victor0218:原来喔.....(装懂) 05/21 02:45
9F:推 jeffl0402:怎麽有种不好的预感 电动电影接触太多XD 05/21 02:46
10F:→ leo700226:完了完了,要开始练成贤者之石了 05/21 02:46
11F:→ syura945: t virus 05/21 02:46
12F:推 hata5566:看起来好像蓝色的眼珠@_@ 05/21 02:47
13F:推 KI780804:@@ 05/21 02:47
14F:推 koukai2:2015年 戴着防毒面具的业务员出现在全世界 05/21 02:47
15F:推 drkkimo:似乎是作出人造的染色体取代原来细菌的 不是无中生有 05/21 02:47
16F:→ killverybig:东西放久发霉生细菌 而已 大惊小怪 05/21 02:48
17F:→ allenthu:保护伞公司要成立了? 05/21 02:48
18F:推 dora1027:他用人造修改的一种细菌染色体取代另一种细菌的染色体 05/21 02:49
19F:推 chenglap:我觉得这比较像是改造生物多过创造生命. 05/21 02:50
20F:→ leonc:人类创造恐龙 恐龙吃掉男人 女人统治世界 05/21 02:50
21F:→ dora1027:让它变成拥有人造染色体的细菌这样... 05/21 02:50
22F:推 ZenEmpty:原来不是无中生有...如果是的话,人类就取代上帝变造物主 05/21 02:50
23F:推 snowrain:怎麽好像有人把输送花粉的管道跟制造花粉的器官搞混=.="a 05/21 02:51
24F:→ dora1027:无中生有的方法一直卡关阿.. 05/21 02:51
25F:推 ffviplayer:钢之链金术师 05/21 02:51
26F:推 hungyacom:这篇应该会被记者抄走 05/21 02:53
27F:→ helpers:记者已经在Google翻译了 05/21 02:54
28F:推 LifeFitter:圣痕....... 05/21 02:54
29F:推 p122607:再某个程度 这不算生命= = 05/21 02:54
30F:推 kimimaro:人体练成是被禁止的!! 05/21 02:54
31F:→ DMW:这不算啦....只是一段自己仿着做的DNA 05/21 02:55
32F:推 vovzz:链成阵? 05/21 02:55
33F:推 s955346:哦哦 原来如此! 真的是很有意思的资料呢! 喝喝 05/21 02:58
34F:推 samcool:终於 人类成为上帝了~ 05/21 02:59
35F:推 indietaiwan:楼下每天都在电脑前自己制造生命啊 05/21 03:00
36F:推 j20006640:制造出了楼上 05/21 03:01
37F:推 hungyacom:所以楼楼上要叫楼上老爸(妈)?XDDDD 05/21 03:02
38F:推 m13211:人体练成是被禁止的...不过可以用贤者之石开外挂 05/21 03:04
39F:→ joy830:ㄑ.......... 05/21 03:06
40F:推 ffviplayer:闲者之石就是人体练成的产物啊= = 05/21 03:07
41F:推 joy830:一个生命转换为另一个生命而已 不是无中生有吧 05/21 03:09
42F:→ moonshade:我以为是无中生有,看了一下是自己合成一个DNA 05/21 03:11
43F:→ moonshade:找一种细菌来复制 05/21 03:11
44F:推 popnbox:勇者别嚣张我一直卡关 05/21 03:14
45F:→ hotdogee:标题错误 05/21 03:14
46F:推 boyen3:要开启左手只是辅助的时代了吗? 05/21 03:15
47F:推 tritonchang:这是崩玉? 05/21 03:16
48F:推 actifamateur:干 又多一只要背 05/21 03:17
49F:推 goodman5566: 干 又多一只要背XDDDDD 05/21 03:19
50F:推 kuinochi: 干 又多一只要背 泪推 05/21 03:22
51F:推 ePaper: 干 又多一只要背 05/21 03:23
52F:推 discoveryray:完了完了 要变殭屍了 05/21 03:25
53F:→ arrakis:太长了懒得帮翻... 05/21 03:26
54F:推 realmask:人类往往幻想作上帝 然而总是变成撒旦 05/21 03:43
55F:→ apskyearth: 干 又多一只要背 XDDD 05/21 03:49
56F:推 ppc: 干 又多一只要背 这应该会放到新教材XDDDD 05/21 03:56
57F:→ flamer:真的是又多一只要背 干 等等马上要考五十几只了说 05/21 03:57
58F:→ littlegreen:关键在於对的闪电能量~ 05/21 04:26
59F:推 vintw:不是基础化学材料,是成功的把整段设计的基因组转植回去 05/21 04:39
60F:推 heavenfun:没看清楚大惊小怪 糗了吧 呵呵 05/21 05:09
61F:→ bob770717:当不了第一个人造生命,那他只好去研究改造後的影响了 05/21 05:37
62F:推 HXZ:这个idea已经有一阵子了... 05/21 05:56
63F:推 Atzivan:可以做第一个人造人 05/21 05:57
64F:→ chevalierxd:瓶中小人要诞生了 05/21 06:47
65F:推 tk1211:BIO!! 05/21 06:50
66F:→ iamlost1217:哈~杂~~~ 05/21 07:16
67F:推 dougho:推craig venter 高手!! 05/21 07:50
68F:推 timwu:最後一句 Interesting creatures will be bubbling out.. 05/21 07:58
69F:推 jagdzaku:Homunculus.球藻 诞生 05/21 08:00
70F:→ petwing:去X的 怎麽连那种杂志都搞这种耸动标题 明明就是东凑西凑 05/21 08:43
71F:→ petwing:最好这样是「创造」出生命 拿半成品的也算? 05/21 08:43
72F:推 ck517:来了来了 链金术 05/21 08:47
73F:→ puec2:不就是homologous recombination........ 05/21 09:02
74F:→ puec2:这是有什麽了不起的啊...啊,我忘了事Craig Venter... 05/21 09:03
75F:推 shunchao:烧瓶里的小人 05/21 09:16
76F:推 BIKOMAN:再过几年路上就一堆僵屍了吗 05/21 09:53
77F:推 RS512:只是替代DNA 就像义肢的DNA仍保有分生功能这样 05/21 10:08
78F:→ duolon:=========用这种东西作生化机械人 有意识 这样============ 05/21 10:09
79F:→ duolon:==如果用大量的细菌创造出跟人类思考力等同的生化机械人(?= 05/21 10:10
80F:嘘 leftyou:T病毒 05/21 10:20
81F:推 PDAN:赛鲁 05/21 10:28
82F:推 forevertwo:人类身体 几十亿年 人类思想 几千年 05/21 10:37
83F:推 LucAngel:要做出人造生命?那要有贤者之石才行啊 05/21 12:05
84F:推 white07:烧瓶里的小人 05/21 12:30
85F:推 ANDYisME:wow 05/21 15:02
86F:推 nfsong:哇 05/21 19:13
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