Jump to content

Researchers Successfully Store ‘Data’ Inside DNA of Living Bacteria - Piracy News and Crypto Updates - InviteHawk - Your Only Source for Free Torrent Invites

Buy, Sell, Trade or Find Free Torrent Invites for Private Torrent Trackers Such As redacted, blutopia, losslessclub, femdomcult, filelist, Chdbits, Uhdbits, empornium, iptorrents, hdbits, gazellegames, animebytes, privatehd, myspleen, torrentleech, morethantv, bibliotik, alpharatio, blady, passthepopcorn, brokenstones, pornbay, cgpeers, cinemageddon, broadcasthenet, learnbits, torrentseeds, beyondhd, cinemaz, u2.dmhy, Karagarga, PTerclub, Nyaa.si, Polishtracker etc.

Researchers Successfully Store ‘Data’ Inside DNA of Living Bacteria


Recommended Posts

DNA has been the major information storage medium for biology and holds great promise as the next-generation high-density data medium in the digital era. At present, the vast majority of DNA-based data storage approaches rely on in vitro DNA synthesis. Thus, there are limited techniques to encode digital data into the chromosomes of living cells in a single step.

Presently, researchers at Columbia University have pushed the idea much further, by writing data into the DNA of living bacteria, according to Science reports.

To store data inside DNA, it has to be converted by a DNA synthesizer from its binary format of ones and zeros into organic code: combinations of the molecule’s four bases including adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine.

Unfortunately, the more extended this code is, the less accurate the synthesizer work. As a workaround, researchers break up the code into chunks. DNA sequencers then have to piece them together again to access the data.

It also does not prevent DNA from degrading over time, meaning that data collection is not permanent, as science suggests.

As a solution, the researchers from Columbia are trying to figure out if the same thing works with living organisms. Not only would this data last much longer, it could even be passed on to the organisms’ offspring.

A team led by Columbia’s Harris Wang has been working on doing just this for the last couple of years. Most recently, the team managed to electrically encode 72 bits of data to write the string of letters “Hello world!” into a population of bacterial cells.

The researchers used CRISPR, the popular gene-editing technique that can splice and edit new sequences into DNA, to store data in these active genes.

“This work establishes a direct digital-to-biological data storage framework and advances our capacity for information exchange between silicon- and carbon-based entities,” the team writes in their paper published this week in the journal Nature Chemical Biology.

Needless to say, despite the amazing feat, that’s not a lot of data.

“We’re not going to compete with the current memory storage systems,” Wang told Science.

The team will also have to figure out a way for the data to survive mutations and replications of the bacteria’s DNA.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Avoid unnecessary posts such as 'Thank you', 'Welcome', etc. Such posts will be deleted and user will be warned if it happens again. If caught spamming, the following actions are applicable -

  • First time - Warning
  • Second time - 5000 Points will be deducted
  • Third time - Ban for 7 days
  • Fourth time - Permanent Ban

If the post helped you, reward the user by reacting to the post like this -

1.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The last post in this topic was made more than 14 days ago. Only post in this topic if you have something valuable to add. Irrelevant posts are not allowed and you will be warned/banned for spamming old topics.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Read this before posting -
  • Only post if you have something valuable to contribute.
  • Avoid unnecessary posts such as 'Thank you', 'Welcome', etc. Such posts will be deleted and you will be warned if it happens again.
  • If the post helped you, reward the user by reacting to the post like this -                      1.jpg
Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Customer Reviews

  • Similar Topics

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.