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Mirror life

Synthetic mirror-image bacteria could be a boon to drug development—but could also interact with the environment in unpredictable and potentially dangerous ways.

Reposted from U of U Health.

Michael Kay

“Mirror life”—a synthetic organism, mirror-reversed on the molecular level from natural life—sounds like an impossibility. And so far, it is—even the simplest mirror bacterium would be dramatically too complex for scientists to attempt making.

But while mirror life is still a hypothetical, it may not always be. Advances in technology could bring the generation of mirror life into the realm of possibility within decades. Mirror-image bacteria could be a boon to drug development—but could also interact with the environment in unpredictable and potentially dangerous ways, according to a commentary on this topic by experts in synthetic life published in Science.

In the following Q &A, co-author Michael Kay, professor of biochemistry in the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine at University of Utah, shares the science of mirror life and why he thinks it should remain hypothetical. He is an expert on mirror-image pharmaceuticals.

Michael Kay Q&A

A commentary by Michael Kay and other experts was published Dec. 12 in Science as "Confronting risks of mirror life.”

The banner image has been modified and is credited to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

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