Science Scientists issue an urgent warning over lab-made 'mirror bacteria' that could wipe out mankind - "So-called 'mirror life' are synthetic organisms that are constructed out of mirrored versions of the molecules found in nature." "The creation of mirror bacteria is at least a decade away"


Leading scientists have issued an urgent warning over the 'unprecedented' risk posed by a lab-made life which could wipe out mankind.

So-called 'mirror life' are synthetic organisms that are constructed out of mirrored versions of the molecules found in nature.

Experts warn that these mirror organisms would be 'invisible' to life on Earth, allowing them to slip past the immune defences of all known organisms.

If mirror bacteria were to escape from the lab, there would be nothing to prevent them from establishing themselves in the wild and threatening plants, animals, and humans with lethal infections.

The creation of mirror bacteria is at least a decade away but, in a 300-page technical review published in Science, the authors note that rapid progress is already being made.

A group of 38 Nobel laureates and other experts, including some who have previously tried to create mirror life, are now calling for a pause on all new research.

Dr Vaughn Cooper, a microbiologist from the University of Pittsburgh and co-author of the paper, says: 'This form of life has never existed or evolved, consequently, all biological interactions would be different or likely wouldn’t work.

'We don’t want to limit that promise of synthetic biology, but building a mirror bacterium is not worth the risk.'

Just like your left hand is a mirror image of your right, many biological molecules also have a left and right-handed mirror molecule.

What makes this feature so important for biology is that it doesn't vary from species to species - the molecules which make up all life on Earth have the same handedness.

For example, the spiralling double-helix of the DNA is right-handed whereas proteins are made up of left-handed amino acids.

Yet, as far as scientists can tell, the fact that our DNA is right-handed is an evolutionary fluke and there is no reason that life might not have evolved out of mirrored components.

So, although mirror life cannot evolve from life as we know it, scientists believe it is possible to create an organism in which all the biological molecules are mirrored.

What would make this so risky is that life on Earth has only evolved to deal with one shape of molecule.

Co-author Professor Gregory Winter, a Nobel prize-winning biologist from the University of Cambridge, told MailOnline: 'The risk of mirror life, in particular mirror bacteria, is that living organisms would not recognise their mirror counterparts as “foreign” and would not have the natural defences to protect themselves from attack by them.

'For example, humans would struggle to make antibodies against the mirror bacteria and be unable to control an infection. Similar arguments apply to all other living organisms, including plants under attack by mirror bacteria.'

Likewise, bacteria's natural predators also rely extensively on the handedness of their prey's molecules to kill bacteria.

This means there is nothing to stop rogue mirror bacteria from escaping into the wild and breeding without control.

The authors write: 'We cannot rule out a scenario in which a mirror bacterium acts as an invasive species across many ecosystems, causing pervasive lethal infections in a substantial fraction of plant and animal species, including humans.'

Even if humans do find a way to defend themselves from this new threat, mirror bacteria could still destabilise large parts of the world's ecosystem.

Co-author Dr Nicholas Talbot, a plant disease expert and executive director of the Sainsbury Laboratory told MailOnline: 'It seems very likely that a mirror bacterium would be able to infect some plants.

'If major food crops were susceptible, the impact would be devastating — alongside the other effects.'

The good news is that the technology to create mirror life is still far off.

In their paper, the authors note that there have been significant breakthroughs in the creation of mirror molecules and the construction of artificial cells.

However, creating synthetic molecules is extremely expensive and would require massive breakthroughs in the field of synthetic cell research.

Dr Talbot says: 'The technical hurdles to create mirror bacteria are significant, so this is probably at least a decade away from being possible, but we felt sufficiently concerned about the risk that we wanted to establish public discourse on this long before it became a reality.'

The researchers are calling for greater scrutiny of their research and conclude that, unless compelling evidence emerges to the contrary, mirror bacteria must not be created.

While there are some possible benefits of mirror bacteria, such as biological drug synthesis and medical applications, the authors argue that the risks are not worth it.

Dr Cooper concludes: 'It would require enormous effort to build such an organism but we must stop that progress and have an organized, inclusive dialogue about how to effectively govern this.'
 
this kind of shadow biosphere would need their own Abiogenesis.
biogenesis probably happened in a primordial soup that doesn't exist anymore. all life uses the same basic building blocks but there's two entire kingdoms of simple single celled life forms that use different chemical and metabolic processes, two entirely unrelated kingdoms of life that both evolved photosynthesis from horizontal gene transfer (at least 4 different times in plants, even more in protists), and all complex multicellular life being the result of the same kind of horizontal gene transfer with mitochondria.

i dont think this is outside of the bounds of theory, it's not even certain that all of the thousands of bits of chemical machinery would even work properly if you somehow recreated the entire biology of life on earth with stereoisomers. chirality isn't that big of a deal as people think, its just obscure. for a good chunk of biologically active compounds only one of the isomers is biologically active. or at least is orders of magnitude more effective than the mirror. it's sometimes taken advantage of in medicine because enzymes can be more or less effective at interacting with one form than the other. it's just an aspect of chemistry that doesn't really come up very often so when it does it seems like some kind of strange magic

this is clickbait
 
Not mirror lives, but Big Pharma has been talking about mirror peptides a lot. They think these will lead to long-lasting drugs because they cannot be broken down by human enzymes.


Perhaps we don't seem to find "mirror lives" because their constituents, such as l-glucose and d-amino acids, are rare in nature?
Don't we already have an issue with drugs in our water supply? Is this really necessary?
 
Not mirror lives, but Big Pharma has been talking about mirror peptides a lot. They think these will lead to long-lasting drugs because they cannot be broken down by human enzymes.


Perhaps we don't seem to find "mirror lives" because their constituents, such as l-glucose and d-amino acids, are rare in nature?
enzymes work significantly more effectively for one isomer than the other and this is the reason why one is found more commonly in nature and also why the mirror compounds are still present and can be isolated. its not just peptides, the tobacco plant produces like 99% of its nicotine as S-nicotine and S-nicotine binds much stronger to nicotine receptors than R-nicotine. if you synthesize it you get a racemic mixture (i found a 5 year old paper that said they could produce it by itself now though so this might be a moot point)

i found a journal article where they made artificial antibacterial peptides less toxic to eukaryotes but still toxic to archaea by substituting D-lysine onto the L-lysine locations on the peptide. surely eventually someone will find an interesting use for them
 
What the fuck does that mean?
L-Isomer based life, most shit is D-isomer based. @Otterly will probably back me up, but literally we don’t know why D is preferred in life.

It’d be funny if we create these things and they struggle to even live due to the abundance of D-isomer shit and their L-based enzymes not breaking down anything.
 
L-Isomer based life, most shit is D-isomer based. @Otterly will probably back me up, but literally we don’t know why D is preferred in life.

It’d be funny if we create these things and they struggle to even live due to the abundance of D-isomer shit and their L-based enzymes not breaking down anything.
Not sure anything’s ever been proven, but isn’t the universe itself asymmetric? Nuclear decay favours one lot, and also if we are all indeed made of stardust, that light radiation is polarised in some way that also favours one lot of isomers. Even the molecules they find on comets have a chirality.
It’s possible that our galaxy favours one form, and who knows maybe other galaxies favour others or maybe the whole universe is the same
 
if our base selves couldnt recognize mirror bacteria, then what’s to say mirror bacteria could recognize us?

I know not all chemicals are chiral, but most complex ones seem to be
I was also wondering about that. Could mirror bacteria interact with our cells like regular bacteria?
 
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It's alright I'll just work on a mirror archaea instead. There's no reason we shouldn't develop mirror bacteria to help natural selection along, though beyond the reason of 'let's see what happens' I'd imagine applying for grant funding won't be so successful unless it's backed by a pharmaceuticals or govt lab. Universities certainly won't be keen to help out unless there's potentially valuable IP they can profit from to recoup their costs on.
 
Not sure anything’s ever been proven, but isn’t the universe itself asymmetric? Nuclear decay favours one lot, and also if we are all indeed made of stardust, that light radiation is polarised in some way that also favours one lot of isomers. Even the molecules they find on comets have a chirality.
It’s possible that our galaxy favours one form, and who knows maybe other galaxies favour others or maybe the whole universe is the same
It’s one of those things where we just don’t know why. My guess is that left handed things are evil and God smacks L-isomer shit with an invisible ruler.
 
Well, I can skin a buck, I can run a trot line, and I know how to make a still. But I have no interest in restarting civilization, so I'm just going to get hammered and eat critters until I get bored.
 
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