UCSD Researchers Create Artificial Cell Membrane
cylonlover writes with an excerpt from a Gizmag article: "The cell membrane is one of the most important components of a cell because it separates the interior from the environment and controls the movement of substances in and out of the cell. In a move that brings mankind another step closer to being able to create artificial life forms from scratch, chemists from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), and Harvard University have created artificial self-assembling cell membranes using a novel chemical reaction. The chemists hope their creation will help shed light on the origins of life."
The full paper is available in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (behind a paywall).
Neat. I used to work for the UCSD Bioengineering department. Many, many smart people worked there. Much more so than the San Diego Supercomputer Center during the tech boom (half the people they hired during that time period were people who'd read a "Learn Programming in 30 Days" book, or whatever, because anyone with any skills were going into industry).
It's always nice to see their work getting press.
....where researchers will attempt to insert "insane" into membrane.
We're finally figuring out the origin of life, with less than a year left for us.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
We're still some ways off! So far we've got the ability to throw a new membrane and a chromosome at a pre-existing cell; there's still a ton of stuff that goes on in between. We still don't know exactly how a lot of it works; there are lots of little protein structures in bacterial cytoplasm that will take a lot of diligent study to figure out. Some day, though. Some day.
(Also, is it just me, or is S nowhere near Y on any keyboard layout ever?)
Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
(Also, is it just me, or is S nowhere near Y on any keyboard layout ever?)
It is -- on German keyboard layouts.
Sust yo sou know, just like the one I use. ;)
I understand scientists do this to better understand the world we live in but why do you want to create life from scratch? We now have tools to manipulate existing cells to our whim. A cell wall is a very complex thing. The word "wall" is misleading. It is semi permeable and there are channels and pores that actively (uses ATP) pump nutrients in an out. There are enzymes, receptors, emitters and many other biomolecules that make up a cell wall. And this is only the cell wall. We haven't even talked about the DNA replication mechanisms, energy generation, organelles, organs etc. Creating a cell from scratch to a microbiologist/biochemist like me is for now like FTL travel to physicists. Nice to dream and speculate about but probably unfeasible.
This is interesting chemistry, but has not got much to do with life or realistic cell membranes.
It's a different key, just the same, poor, confused brain. :D
As always, one notices those things exactly the moment you have already hit "Submit".
Or, I could just say it ranges under the poetic freedom to misspell stuff for fun and profit. That works, too. :p
I vote for the tin cans and plastic widgets. Curing every disease and prolonging life sound like really bad ideas. Surely even biotechs have seen that episode of Start Trek.
You never really know how close to the edge you can go until you fall off.
. . . we did this in high school Biology with hotdog casing.
"So is the BSD licence even more 'free' (than GPLv2)? Yes. Unquestionably." --Linus Torvalds (TinyURL.com/2vugzl)
Actually the challenge of deciding what is and isn't life is an ongoing mess; we haven't quite come to a universal agreement about some of the attributes. It's more of a definition issue than a chemistry one at this point, in fact! We've done a lot of experiments and discovered quite a few ways to kill a cell. :)
Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
Dammit! I thought it was just AZERTY when I glanced at it. Curse you!
Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
What's this membrane they're talking about? A soap bubble is a membrane for godssakes.
Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
Althought the paper manages not to mention it, the chemistry they are doing here is (the alkyne azide cyclisation) is part of "click" chemistry, which is quite well known.
What the paper doesn't really say is whether they hope to accomplish anything further with this. As with all biomimetic reaction, it seems (to me) that synthesising a single step in the process may be intersting, without doing all the previous steps, is there any practical point?
Yeah, that stuff.
Actually, I'm on the fence about antibiotics. There are those claims that they drive selection for resistant strains, so there's some hope there.
You never really know how close to the edge you can go until you fall off.