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    Dynamique
    Guest

    Problem-solving bacteria

    "Awesome" is not the first word that popped into my head when reading this!
    --------------

    Problem Solving Bacteria
    by Kevin Bonham
    We, Beasties
    November 17, 2010
    https://scienceblogs.com/webeasties/...g_bacteria.php

    This is just awesome:

    A strain of Escherichia coli bacteria can now solve
    [sudoku] puzzles [...] "Because sudoku has simple
    rules, we felt that maybe bacteria could solve it
    for us, as long as we designed a circuit for them to
    follow," says team leader Ryo Taniuchi.

    The mechanism is ingenious and yet straightforward at
    the same time.

    Basically, they have 16 different strains of bacteria,
    with each initial strain representing a spatial
    coordinate on a 4x4 grid. Each bacterium has a "4C3
    leak" system, which is a chunk of DNA that the team
    designed that has 4 possible outputs. Depending on
    incoming signals, different chunks of that DNA will be
    excised, leaving only 1 output remaining.

    Once there is only 1 element left, that bacterium is
    "differentiated," and starts making viruses that can
    transmit information about its location and identity.
    Bacteria strains in the same row, column or section can
    receive information from that bacterium, but others
    express special anti-sense RNA sequences that will
    silence incoming viruses from other locations (this
    probably doesn't make sense if you've never played
    sudoku before - you can check out the team's abstract to
    learn more).

    [moderator: the abstract is found here -
    https://2010.igem.org/Team:UT-Tokyo/Sudoku_abstract]

    All 16 strains are thrown into a flask to grow together,
    with a few of the strains pre-differentiated to start
    the puzzle off - once these have communicated to all of
    their neighbors, each strain "location" will
    differentiate and transmit that new information to its
    neighbors, and the puzzle will solve itself. The
    information in this culture flask must then be
    visualized by taking the viruses floating around in the
    flask and adding them to another set of engineered
    bacteria which are plated out in a 4x4 grid, and express
    particularly colored fluorescent proteins.

    I think that the viruses and bacteria used in this
    system can barely even be called viruses and bacteria.
    We don't call a hammer "shaped steel with a rubber
    grip," even though that's what it's made from. These
    "organisms" are so heavily engineered, so sculpted to
    our ends that they are barely a shadow of their former
    selves. They are membrane-enclosed tools. And we're only
    getting better at these sorts of manipulations.

    Like I said - awesome.
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