creating “Inorganic life” – first tentative steps have now been taken

Now this is interesting, really interesting … lets start with five key bullet points  …

  • Scientists at the University of Glasgow say they have taken their first tentative steps towards creating ‘life’ from inorganic chemicals
  • If they really do construct complex chemical cells with life-like properties, it could help us understand how life emerged (but they are not there yet, it is just a first step).
  • What they have actually done is to demonstrate a new way of making inorganic-chemical-cells or iCHELLS.
  • Their goal is to eventually create self-replicating, evolving inorganic cells that would essentially be alive
  • Don’t mix this up with synthetic biology (the work being done by Craig Venter), they are using existing biological building blocks to make new stuff

The idea is that these Inorganic chemical cells (iCHELLs) can be compartmentalized by creating internal membranes that control the passage of materials and energy through them, meaning several chemical processes can be isolated within the same cell — just like biological cells.

It is really fascinating stuff because iCHELLs, which can also store electricity, could potentially be used in all sorts of applications in medicine, as sensors or to confine chemical reactions.

Here is a TED talk from July 2011 by Professor Lee Cronin, the chap driving all this:

The Guardian have also written an article on all this entitled “Aliens could be made from iron“. This takes the form of a Q&A interview. Here is some of that dialog …

What is inorganic biology?

Inorganic biology is my attempt to try to ask a very basic question about the nature of matter in the universe: can we do biology outside of organic chemistry?

You think biology is defined by evolution?

Yes, evolution occurs in biology but it doesn’t occur anywhere else in the natural world. What I mean by evolution is this idea of survival of the fittest and adaptation by replication or birth of offspring. Evolution is a very good way to make complex systems that are robust and function in an environment. Darwin’s theory of evolution is in fact a special theory of evolution because it only applies to biology, it only applies to carbon-based life. But four-and-a-half billion years ago there was no life. So I wanted to ask the question: what is the most basic unit of stuff that can independently undergo evolution? You could probably tell me the answer…

Bacteria?

Exactly, a biologist might say bacteria are too complex but basically they are single-cell creatures of some description. And so when you set up that you come up with three questions, which are: what is life?; is biology special?; is matter evolvable? If we answer them in reverse order: we know matter is evolvable because biology is made of matter and it needs chemistry material to do its stuff. And if we could make general stuff outside of biology evolve, then we would know how special it is. And then that would lead us to question what is life.

To finish, here is a quote from Prof Lee Cronin that (for me) sums all this up …

If successful this would give us some incredible insights into evolution and show that it’s not just a biological process. It would also mean that we would have proven that non carbon-based life could exist and totally redefine our ideas of design.

 Links

  • University of Glasgow press release – (12 Sept 2011)
  • Guardian Article – (28th Aug 2011)
  • His talk at TEDGlobal in Edinburgh – (Filmed July 2011)
  • Geoffrey J. T. Cooper, et al., Modular Redox-Active Inorganic Chemical Cells: iCHELLs, Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2011

1 thought on “creating “Inorganic life” – first tentative steps have now been taken”

  1. There is something important to remember here: unlike physics (big bang, quantum theory) and biology (evolution), chemistry has not come up with a grand theory that affects discussions about the ultimate meaning of life and the interface with topics traditionally considered to be the province of religion and philosophy. In fact chemistry has borrowed from physics in order to function, which may make it seem like a considerably less accomplished subject in its own right. However, it stands to discover the origins of life with research such as that pursued by the Cronin group (although others as well: recent publications in Nature Chem. show just how much questions about the origins of life have been inspiring really good work; we’ve had important reports about the origins of chirality and the emergence of proto-cell replication).

    My blog entry on this is here:
    http://www.lukesci.com/2011/09/10/what-is-life-and-where-did-it-come-from-chemistry-is-on-the-case/

    Thanks.

    Reply

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