Scientists Injected Tiny Robots into Cockroaches to Create Living Computers
Jesse Emspak, Live Science
Nanotechnology just got a little bit smarter.
At the Institute of
Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials at Israel’s Bar-Ilan University,
Ido Bachelet led a team of scientists in building tiny robots that can
respond to chemical cues and operate inside a living animal. More than
that, they can operate as logic gates, essentially acting as real
computers.
That gives the nanobots
— on the order of nanometers, or one-billionth of a meter — the ability
to follow specific instructions, making them programmable. Such tiny
robots could do everything from target tumors to repair tissue damage.
The experimenters used a technique called “DNA origami”
to make the robots. DNA comes in a double-helix shape, making long
strings. And like yarn, the strings can be linked together to make
different shapes. In this case, the researchers knitted together DNA
into a kind of folded box with a lid, a robot called an “E” for
“effector.” The “lid” opened when certain molecules bumped into it.
The robots were injected into a Blaberus discoidalis cockroach, a species commonly used as pet food for reptiles.
Inside each “box” was another chemical, which recognized the hemolymph
cells, which are the cockroach’s version of white blood cells. The
chemical in the box would bind to the blood cells.But instead of just injecting one kind of robot, the scientists used four: “E,” “P1,” “P2,” and “N.”
The different robots carried “keys” to open up the E robots in the presence of one or more chemical cues. So, for example, one test was on E robots that opened up only if both cues (call them X and Y) were present. Adding the P1 robots to the mix lets the E’s open up in response to X only, while adding the P2 robots lets the E robots open in response to Y only.
This is just like a logic gate in a computer — an AND (X and Y) or an OR gate (X or Y).
Meanwhile, the N robots stop the E bots from opening up, so they function like the NOT gates in a computer.
In combination, all of these
robots can then do logical operations, such as counting the number of
times a given chemical hits the robot carrying the payload being
delivered.
“It allows you to look for more
than an AND operation,” said Shawn Douglas, an assistant professor at
the University of California, San Francisco, who worked with Bachelet on
similar projects in 2012 at Harvard’s Wyss Institute. Douglas was not
involved in the current research.
In addition, the research is the
first time someone has demonstrated this particular type of logic
system in living animals, he said, which is a first step toward trying
it out on other species.
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