To persist, life must reproduce. Over billions of years, organisms have
evolved many ways of replicating, from budding plants to sexual animals to
invading viruses.
Now scientists have discovered an entirely new form of biological
reproduction—and applied their discovery to create the first-ever,
self-replicating living robots.
The same team that built the first living robots ("Xenobots," assembled from
frog cells—reported in 2020) has discovered that these computer-designed and
hand-assembled organisms can swim out into their tiny dish, find single
cells, gather hundreds of them together, and assemble "baby" Xenobots inside
their Pac-Man-shaped "mouth"—that, a few days later, become new Xenobots
that look and move just like themselves.
And then these new Xenobots can go out, find cells, and build copies of
themselves. Again and again.
"With the right design—they will spontaneously self-replicate," says Joshua
Bongard, a computer scientist and robotics expert at the University of
Vermont who co-led the new research.
The results of the new research were published November 29, 2021, in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Into the Unknown
In a Xenopus laevis frog, these embryonic cells would develop into skin.
"They would be sitting on the outside of a tadpole, keeping out pathogens
and redistributing mucus," says Michael Levin, a professor of biology and
director of the Allen Discovery Center at Tufts University and co-leader of
the new research. "But we're putting them into a novel context. We're giving
them a chance to reimagine their multicellularity."
And what they imagine is something far different than skin. "People have
thought for quite a long time that we've worked out all the ways that life
can reproduce or replicate. But this is something that's never been observed
before," says co-author Douglas Blackiston, the senior scientist at Tufts
University who assembled the Xenobot "parents" and developed the biological
portion of the new study.
"This is profound," says Levin. "These cells have the genome of a frog, but,
freed from becoming tadpoles, they use their collective intelligence, a
plasticity, to do something astounding." In earlier experiments, the
scientists were amazed that Xenobots could be designed to achieve simple
tasks. Now they are stunned that these biological objects—a
computer-designed collection of cells—will spontaneously replicate. "We have
the full, unaltered frog genome," says Levin, "but it gave no hint that
these cells can work together on this new task," of gathering and then
compressing separated cells into working self-copies.
"These are frog cells replicating in a way that is very different from how
frogs do it. No animal or plant known to science replicates in this way,"
says Sam Kriegman, the lead author on the new study, who completed his Ph.D.
in Bongard's lab at UVM and is now a post-doctoral researcher at Tuft's
Allen Center and Harvard University's Wyss Institute for Biologically
Inspired Engineering.
On its own, the Xenobot parent, made of some 3,000 cells, forms a sphere.
"These can make children but then the system normally dies out after that.
It's very hard, actually, to get the system to keep reproducing," says
Kriegman. But with an artificial intelligence program working on the Deep
Green supercomputer cluster at UVM's Vermont Advanced Computing Core, an
evolutionary algorithm was able to test billions of body shapes in
simulation—triangles, squares, pyramids, starfish—to find ones that allowed
the cells to be more effective at the motion-based "kinematic" replication
reported in the new research.
"We asked the supercomputer at UVM to figure out how to adjust the shape of
the initial parents, and the AI came up with some strange designs after
months of chugging away, including one that resembled Pac-Man," says
Kriegman. "It's very non-intuitive. It looks very simple, but it's not
something a human engineer would come up with. Why one tiny mouth? Why not
five? We sent the results to Doug and he built these Pac-Man-shaped parent
Xenobots. Then those parents built children, who built grandchildren, who
built great-grandchildren, who built great-great-grandchildren." In other
words, the right design greatly extended the number of generations.
Kinematic replication is well-known at the level of molecules—but it has
never been observed before at the scale of whole cells or organisms.
"We've discovered that there is this previously unknown space within
organisms, or living systems, and it's a vast space," says Bongard, a
professor in UVM's College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences. "How do
we then go about exploring that space? We found Xenobots that walk. We found
Xenobots that swim. And now, in this study, we've found Xenobots that
kinematically replicate. What else is out there?"
Or, as the scientists write in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences study: "life harbors surprising behaviors just below the surface,
waiting to be uncovered."
Responding to Risk
Some people may find this exhilarating. Others may react with concern, or
even terror, to the notion of a self-replicating biotechnology. For the team
of scientists, the goal is deeper understanding.
"We are working to understand this property: replication. The world and
technologies are rapidly changing. It's important, for society as a whole,
that we study and understand how this works," says Bongard. These
millimeter-sized living machines, entirely contained in a laboratory, easily
extinguished, and vetted by federal, state and institutional ethics experts,
"are not what keep me awake at night. What presents risk is the next
pandemic; accelerating ecosystem damage from pollution; intensifying threats
from climate change," says UVM's Bongard. "This is an ideal system in which
to study self-replicating systems. We have a moral imperative to understand
the conditions under which we can control it, direct it, douse it,
exaggerate it."
Bongard points to the COVID epidemic and the hunt for a vaccine. "The speed
at which we can produce solutions matters deeply. If we can develop
technologies, learning from Xenobots, where we can quickly tell the AI,: 'We
need a biological tool that does X and Y and suppresses Z,' —that could be
very beneficial. Today, that takes an exceedingly long time." The team aims
to accelerate how quickly people can go from identifying a problem to
generating solutions—"like deploying living machines to pull microplastics
out of waterways or build new medicines," Bongard says.
"We need to create technological solutions that grow at the same rate as the
challenges we face," Bongard says.
And the team sees promise in the research for advancements toward
regenerative medicine. "If we knew how to tell collections of cells to do
what we wanted them to do, ultimately, that's regenerative medicine—that's
the solution to traumatic injury, birth defects, cancer, and aging," says
Levin. "All of these different problems are here because we don't know how
to predict and control what groups of cells are going to build. Xenobots are
a new platform for teaching us."
Reference:
Kinematic self-replication in reconfigurable organisms, Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (2021).
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2112672118
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ReplyDeleteIn the study of Life, we must not confuse it with reflective consciousness in humans. Life has a more simplified unconditional attachment to matter. It also knows the pattern that connects all living things, in this one Life. Lifeless viruses like covid 19 and others have powers that are not living ones. The movement and replication of Robots does not mean they are full of Life.
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