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Scouring the Seas for Matter to Create Life |
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By Stephen Leahy*
Can
we create ''super bacteria'' capable of generating energy? There
are those who believe it can be done, including the controversial
scientist J. Craig Venter, expert in synthetic biology.
BROOKLIN, Canada - Somewhere in the South Pacific
Ocean, a private research ship owned by controversial genetic scientist
J. Craig Venter is collecting bacteria from the sea, hoping to find
the biological building blocks he can use to create a synthetic
life-form that will one day become a new source of energy.
As fantastic as it sounds, U.S. scientists, including Venter, have
already created such life forms from bits of DNA, the building blocks
of the cells that make up all living things.
For instance, in 2002, geneticists at the State University of New
York manufactured a polio virus. While that effort took years, Venter
in two weeks last year assembled a bacteriophage, a virus that infects
bacteria A1.
Bacteriophage is a very simple life form, with just 5,000 base pairs
in its genetic map. The human genome has three billion pairs.
Bacteria have around four million, and creating an artificial version
would be much more complicated, but there are those who believe
it can be done.
The process is called synthetic biology or nano-biotechnology, and
uses pieces of DNA and individual molecules to build what are in
essence living machines.
Venter and his peers are scouring the planet for bacteria that are
much more efficient than known varieties at converting sunlight
and biological matter into energy, the basis for the alternative
energy source biomass, which turns agricultural and other biological
waste into fuel.
The DNA of those super bacteria would then provide the blueprint
for the living machines.
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) thinks Venter is the scientist
for this job.
Last year the DOE gave Venter's organization, the Institute for
Biological Energy Alternatives (IBEA), nine million dollars to create
artificial organisms that reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere and to produce biological energy sources.
With this advance, U.S. Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham said
in a statement, ''It is easier to imagine, in the not-too-distant
future, a colony of specially designed microbes living within the
emission-control system of a coal-fired plant, consuming its pollution
and its carbon dioxide, or employing microbes to radically reduce
water pollution or to reduce the toxic effects of radioactive waste.''
But other observers see a more frightening future.
The creation of new life forms has enormous implications for all
humankind, says Silvia Ribeiro of the environmental non-governmental
ETC Group.
''This is potentially much riskier than GM (genetically modified)
crops. Releasing completely new forms of life into the world might
open a Pandora's box,'' she told Tierramérica from her Mexico City
office.
''There should be an open, public debate about this.''
IBEA did not reply to Tierramérica's requests for comment.
Brewster Kneen, a Canadian writer and biotechnology critic, sees
Venter's quest as more of the U.S. government's continuing promotion
of biotechnology as the solution to all problems.
''Rather than making real efforts to deal with the sources of pollutants,
they try to distract people with this 'magic bullet' thinking,''
he said in an interview.
David Caron, a marine biologist at the University of Southern California,
says Venter's project has the potential to solve some environmental
problems but is a very long-term proposition. ''We can't even guess
what they'll find.''
* Stephen Leahy is a Tierramérica contributor.
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