Meet The Xenobot: World's First Living, Self-Healing Robots
19:14
(CNN)Scientists have created the world's first living, self-healing robots using stem cells from frogs.
Named
xenobots after the African clawed frog (Xenopus laevis) from which they
take their stem cells, the machines are less than a millimeter (0.04
inches) wide -- small enough to travel inside human bodies. They can
walk and swim, survive for weeks without food, and work together in
groups.
These are "entirely new life-forms," said the University
of Vermont, which conducted the research with Tufts University's Allen
Discovery Center.
Stem cells are unspecialized cells that have
the ability to develop into different cell types. The researchers
scraped living stem cells from frog embryos, and left them to incubate.
Then, the cells were cut and reshaped into specific "body forms"
designed by a supercomputer -- forms "never seen in nature," according
to a news release from the University of Vermont
The cells then
began to work on their own -- skin cells bonded to form structure, while
pulsing heart muscle cells allowed the robot to move on its own.
Xenobots even have self-healing capabilities; when the scientists sliced
into one robot, it healed by itself and kept moving.
"These are
novel living machines," said Joshua Bongard, one of the lead researchers
at the University of Vermont, in the news release. "They're neither a
traditional robot nor a known species of animal. It's a new class of
artifact: a living, programmable organism."
Xenobots don't look
like traditional robots -- they have no shiny gears or robotic arms.
Instead, they look more like a tiny blob of moving pink flesh. The
researchers say this is deliberate -- this "biological machine" can
achieve things typical robots of steel and plastic cannot.
Traditional
robots "degrade over time and can produce harmful ecological and health
side effects," researchers said in the study, which was published
Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. As
biological machines, xenobots are more environmentally friendly and
safer for human health, the study said.
The xenobots could
potentially be used toward a host of tasks, according to the study,
which was partially funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency, a federal agency that oversees the development of technology for
military use.
Xenobots could be used to clean up radioactive
waste, collect microplastics in the oceans, carry medicine inside human
bodies, or even travel into our arteries to scrape out plaque. The
xenobots can survive in aqueous environments without additional
nutrients for days or weeks -- making them suitable for internal drug
delivery.
Aside from these immediate practical tasks, the
xenobots could also help researchers to learn more about cell biology --
opening the doors to future advancement in human health and longevity.
"If
we could make 3D biological form on demand, we could repair birth
defects, reprogram tumors into normal tissue, regenerate after traumatic
injury or degenerative disease, and defeat aging," said the
researchers' website. This research could have "a massive impact on
regenerative medicine (building body parts and inducing regeneration.)"
It may all sound like something from a dystopian sci-fi movie, but the researchers say there is no need for alarm.
The
organisms come pre-loaded with their own food source of lipid and
protein deposits, allowing them to live for a little over a week -- but
they can't reproduce or evolve. However, their lifespan can increase to
several weeks in nutrient-rich environments.
And although the
supercomputer -- a powerful piece of artificial intelligence -- plays a
big role in building these robots, it's "unlikely" that the AI could
have evil intentions.
"At the moment though it is difficult to
see how an AI could create harmful organisms any easier than a talented
biologist with bad intentions could," said the researchers' website.
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