Archive for the ‘bioengineering’ category: Page 184
Jan 25, 2017
Bioprinting Human Skin Cuts the Time Needed from Weeks to Minutes
Posted by Steve Hill in categories: 3D printing, bioengineering, bioprinting, biotech/medical
More progress for tissue engineering.
Skin is one of the easier starting points for 3D bioprinting, the application of rapid prototyping technologies to the construction of living tissue. Since skin is a thin tissue, the challenging issue of producing the intricate blood vessel networks needed to supply inner cells with oxygen and nutrients can be skipped. Thin tissue sections can be supported in a suitable nutrient bath, and after transplant, patient blood vessels will grow into the new skin. Further, there is a fairly large and long-established research and development industry involved in various forms of skin regeneration. Numerous forms of prototype skin-like tissues have been created over the years, lacking many of the features of the real thing, but still useful in the treatment of, for example, burn victims. Further, skin structure is by now well understood, and considerable progress has been made in deciphering the signals and environment needed for suitable cells to self-assemble into the correct arrangements. All told, it should not be a complete surprise to see significant progress emerge in this part of the field.
Jan 25, 2017
Researchers Make Artificial Cells That Can Replicate Themselves
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: bioengineering
Jan 24, 2017
New Organisms Have Been Formed Using the First Ever 6-Letter Genetic Code
Posted by Sean Cusack in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, genetics
Scientists have engineered the first ever ‘semi-synthetic’ organisms, by breeding E. coli bacteria with an expanded, six-letter genetic code.
While every living thing on Earth is formed according to a DNA code made up of four bases (represented by the letters G, T, C and A), these modified E. coli carry an entirely new type of DNA, with two additional DNA bases, X and Y, nestled in their genetic code.
The team, led by Floyd Romesberg from the Scripps Research Institute in California, engineered synthetic nucleotides — molecules that serve as the building blocks of DNA and RNA — to create an additional base pair, and they’ve successfully inserted this into the E. coli’s genetic code.
Continue reading “New Organisms Have Been Formed Using the First Ever 6-Letter Genetic Code” »
Jan 24, 2017
Biologists just created the world’s first stable semi-synthetic organism
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical
Created by a team of bioengineers, the semisynthetic organism has DNA made up of four natural bases and two manmade bases.
Jan 23, 2017
Scientists want to give the world a second chance at Caspian tigers
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: bioengineering
Jan 21, 2017
Human patient treated with CRISPR gene editing for the first time
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical
Jan 20, 2017
The UN Okays Synthetic Biology
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: bioengineering, biological, ethics, existential risks, genetics
That’s a relief.
Of all the potentially apocalyptic technologies scientists have come up with in recent years, the gene drive is easily one of the most terrifying. A gene drive is a tool that allows scientists to use genetic engineering to override natural selection during reproduction. In theory, scientists could use it to alter the genetic makeup of an entire species—or even wipe that species out. It’s not hard to imagine how a slip-up in the lab could lead to things going very, very wrong.
But like most great risks, the gene drive also offers incredible reward. Scientists are, for example, exploring how gene drive might be used to wipe out malaria and kill off Hawaii’s invasive species to save endangered native birds. Its perils may be horrifying, but its promise is limitless. And environmental groups have been campaigning hard to prevent that promise from ever being realized.
Jan 20, 2017
Scientists Have a Plan to Bring Back the Caspian Tiger, Which Has Been Extinct for 50 Years
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: bioengineering, genetics
Caspian tigers were some of the largest cats ever to roam the Earth, but they went extinct in the 1960s. Now, some scientists want to bring them back.
A new study, published in the journal Biological Conservation, lays out the plan to reintroduce the tigers using a subspecies, the Siberian tiger, which is genetically similar to the Caspian tiger.
The authors write in their paper that the Siberians tiger’s “phenotype proves adaptable to the arid conditions of the introduction site”.
Jan 19, 2017
Equipping Insects for Special Service
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, drones
Draper combines navigation and neuromodulation to guide insects
CAMBRIDGE, MA – The smallest aerial drones mimic insects in many ways, but none can match the efficiency and maneuverability of the dragonfly. Now, engineers at Draper are creating a new kind of hybrid drone by combining miniaturized navigation, synthetic biology and neurotechnology to guide dragonfly insects. The system looks like a backpack for a dragonfly.
DragonflEye, an internal research and development project at Draper, is already showing promise as a way to guide the flightpath of dragonflies. Potential applications of the technologies underpinning DragonflEye include guided pollination, payload delivery, reconnaissance and even precision medicine and diagnostics.