On the verge of creating the first living synthetic being.

On the verge of creating the first living synthetic being.


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Recent global news announcing the creation of the first artificial life form in a laboratory may have been masking a disturbing biological secret; a team from the University of Minnesota unveiled a breakthrough that captured the world's attention: the development of a synthetic cell capable of growing, replicating its own DNA, and dividing into new cells.


Websites and video channels quickly proclaimed that humanity had finally created life in the lab—but is that really what happened? We will analyze the molecular engineering behind the so-called "SpudCell," discover why this experiment represents a major milestone in synthetic biology, and determine whether science has truly created a new form of life.


Until now, virtually all major synthetic biology projects began with existing organisms; researchers would alter bacteria, remove genes, add new DNA fragments, or reprogram natural microorganisms to perform specific functions.


Light SpudCell follows a completely different path. Instead of modifying an existing cell, scientists assembled a cellular platform using only artificial components carefully organized in the laboratory. The goal was never to perfectly replicate a natural cell, but rather to discover the minimum elements required for a biological system to carry out what we call the life cycle.


The results impressed even specialists in the field, as SpudCell managed to grow, replicate its genetic material, and initiate cell division to form new daughter cells during the experiments. In another test, researchers introduced a genetically modified variant that possessed a slight growth advantage. After several generations, this version came to dominate the entire population, replicating a phenomenon strikingly similar to the process of natural selection observed in living organisms.




For the first time, a fully synthetic platform has successfully demonstrated a relatively complete biological cycle in the laboratory, showing that fundamental evolutionary principles can emerge even in artificially constructed systems; yet, it is precisely here that the distinction between a functional cell and a truly living organism arises. Despite carrying out essential stages of the cell cycle, SpudCell remains entirely dependent on the infrastructure created by the researchers: it does not produce its own ribosomes, fails to generate enough energy to sustain its metabolism, and requires a continuous supply of various chemical components from the experimental environment—without this external support, its functioning rapidly collapses.

After just a few generations, the system's stability vanishes and the entire process ceases to function. This limitation explains why many scientists refrain from claiming that life has been created in the laboratory; what exists today is an extremely sophisticated biological platform capable of replicating some of the fundamental processes of living organisms, yet still unable to survive independently.

In other words, SpudCell is not a new species; it is a powerful scientific tool for understanding how life itself works. SpudCell does not represent the definitive creation of artificial life, but it demonstrates that we are learning, step by step, to disassemble and reassemble the very mechanism of life.

No one knows for certain if it will ever be possible to build a fully autonomous organism, but if progress continues along this path in the coming decades, we could witness the emergence of the first organisms entirely designed in the laboratory. Until then, SpudCell should be viewed exactly for what it represents: not the definitive birth of artificial life, but one of the steps toward that future.




Sorry for my Ingles, it's not my main language. The images were taken from the sources used or were created with artificial intelligence


Posted Using INLEO



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