People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
22 May 30, 2010 |
Creating Life from Four
Bottles of
Chemicals?
Amit Sen Gupta
THE
publication of a claim that scientists have created “life” from “four
bottles
of chemicals” in the American journal, Science,
has attracted considerable attention. Reactions have been varied, with
one
commentator even hailing it as “one
of the most important scientific achievements in the
history of mankind”. Others have
been more
muted and many researchers in the field of biotechnology have
questioned
whether it is appropriate to claim that “life” had actually been
“created” in a
laboratory. Many other reactions have come in from religious groups
decrying
“man’s attempt to play God” and from those raising concerns that the
release of
“synthetic” organisms pose a threat to nature.
CRAIG VENTER:
BIO-ENTERPRENEUR ICON
Perhaps the publicity around
the claim would have been less
extragavant if at the centre of it there was not a person called Craig
Venter.
A larger than life figure in the field of biotechnology, Craig Venter
has been
described by one commentator as a “bio-enterpreneur icon”. It is an
accurate
description, for Venter is better known as an enterpreneur working in
the field
of science, rather than as a person working at the cutting edge of
science. So,
while analysing the very important claim that Venter makes, his persona
and
past history needs to be factored in.
In 2001, Venter was in the centre of another
widely
reported event – the mapping of the human genome. The unveiling of the
map of
the human genome was greeted with the accolades that it deserved. But,
for the
first time in the history of science, the details of such a
pathbreaking event
was published separately by two different sets of scientists in two
different
journals! The two sets of scientists represent, respectively, the
public funded
Human Genome project, and a private company called Celera Genomics.
Celera Genomics
was a company that Craig Venter had started in 1996. The former
published its
results in the journal Nature, and the latter in the journal Science
(the same,
incidentally that has now published Venter’s recent work!).
The story of the human genome
project provides
us clues about how Craig Venter sees science and its utility. He left
the
premier public funded research institute in the US -- the National
Institute of
Health (NIH) -- in 1991 because he wanted the institute to patent
individual
genes that were then being discovered, in the early days of the human
genome
project. His biggest opponent at that time was James Watson, part of
the Watson
and Crick duo who first explained the structure of DNA – the basic
building block of life that
makes up the genome of any living
organism. Watson is famously know to have said at that time that the
patenting
scheme was "sheer lunacy" and that "virtually any monkey"
could do what Venter’s group was doing. In 2001, the public funded
Human Genome
project (in which many countries including
WAS LIFE
REALLY
CREATED?
Let us fast forward to 2010 and examine what
Craig
Venter and his team have achieved. Venter claims that his team has
created life
from four bottles of chemicals. Let us try to understand what was
actually done.
Venter’s team first analysed the entire genome of a single-cell
bacterium called
Mycoplasma mycoide. This
was a huge
exercise, which took about 15 years, cost $40 million and required 25
researchers to accomplish. The genome is the portion of any living cell
(bacteria are single celled organism but complex organisms such as
humans are
made up of by millions of cells with specialised functions) that
contains the
code that tells the cell how it should function. The code is written
into the
genome by millions of permutations and combinations of four basic sugar
molecules – in bacteria these sugar molecules are adenine, guanine,
cytosine
and thymine. In the case of the Mycoplasma
mycoidegenome that Venter’s team worked
with, over a million bits of
code (1.08 million bits to be exact)
in the bacterium’s genome was recorded in a computer. Exact copies of
each bit
of code was then synthesised artificially and assembled together by
techniques
that are now available. To differentiate the genome from a naturally
existing
one, “watermarks” were added – a few sequences that do not have any
useful code
written into them but were a form of signature added by the team to
stamp their
ownership over the synthetic genome. The final step involved the
transplanting
of the synthetic Mycoplasma
mycoides genome
into
recipient cells of a related bacteria (Mycoplasma capricolum).
To
ensure that the recipient cell did not reject the newly inserted genome
a gene
responsible for producing a “restriction” enzyme in the recipient cell
had to
be inactivated. To put it in Venter’s own words, “on March
26, the synthetic genome was "booted up" -- and
it worked! The new bacterium started doing what bacteria do best – i.e.
it
started replicating and making copies of its own self.
Can we say that Craig Venter’s team actually
“created”
life? If we cut through the hype of newspaper reports, the answer is
no. What
the team of scientists did was not insubstantial, but they definitely
did not
create life. They diligently copied millions of instructions in an
existing
bacterium and then inserted these instructions into another existing
cell. There
should be no hesitation in accepting that it was a huge computational
exercise.
But it was just that and no more. The team blindly copied the code
without any
means to know what each bit of code actually meant. It was like making
an exact
copy of the Mona Lisa on a different canvas, without the copier being
able to
claim that he had been transformed into Leonardo Da Vinci. For while
the copier
could claim to have made an exact copy, unlike Da Vinci he would still
not have
acquired the knowledge of how each brush stroke would blend into the
next. In
other words, he would not know how to make another masterpiece on his
own. The
same is true for Venter’s team. If they do not have an existing genome
to copy
from, they cannot create another synthetic genome.
The above does not imply that sometime in the
future
we shall not have the knowledge and the technique to really create life
from
first principles. What it does, however, show is how far away we still
are from
being able to do so. For, in order to do so, we would need to know
exactly what
each of the over a million codes in the genome does. Only then can we
create
the bits, knowing their functions, and then assembling them to create
an artificial
organism whose functions and characteristics we would have defined.
Remember
that here we are discussing the synthesis of the most primitive
one-celled form
of life. Imagine how much more complex it would be to attempt to
synthesise
multi-celled living beings which can each have millions of cells, each
with
millions of buts of code. Hence it is mere speculation to infer that
Venter’s
accomplishments would lead to the synthesis of a wide range of useful
products
such as bacteria to tackle oil spills or to produce medicines.
In some ways recombinant technologies used to
create
genetically modified organisms (GMOs), where the genetic code of useful
characteristics
of one organism are identified and then inserted into another organism,
is much
nearer to the process of creating an entire new organism. Today this
technology
is still very primitive, and we are barely able to use it to identify,
extract
and insert one or a few (among millions) characteristics.
UTILITY OF
& CONTROL
OVER SCIENCE
Let us turn to the real issues that need to
be
addressed in the wake of what Venter’s team has accomplished. There
have been
the usual “knee jerk” reactions about the need to stop “messing” with
nature
and the need to restrict research in areas about the consequences of
which we
do not know enough. Such doomsday prophecies have two problems. While
we have
started “messing” with nature at the cellular level only recently, we
have been
doing so for the last hundreds of thousand of years – ever since the
human
species left the trees and started changing nature to suit its needs.
Settled
agriculture, urbanisation, industrialisation, etc., have been changing
much of
nature as it existed for centuries and more. Yes, we are reaping the
consequences of some of our actions – as best evident from the looming
climate
crisis. But does the answer to that lie in our going back to living in
the wild
and foraging for roots and berries? We would argue that the answer
lies,
rather, in increasing our knowledge about nature, so that we are better
able to
decide how much we can extract from nature and still keep the planet
habitable
and able to provide to every inhabitant of the planet what she or he
needs.
Further, if all that we do in science was to be predictable, we would
not be
doing science! Which does not mean science should not have boundaries.
But such
boundaries need to be negotiated between the concern that we need to
know more
and that we should not use this knowledge to create something that can
cause
irreparable harm.
Of more immediate concern, as regards the
feat
achieved by Venter’s team, relates to how the knowledge that has
accrued will
be used and controlled. The use or misuse of knowledge can have
boundaries only
if it is open to public scrutiny and not bottled up in private hands
through
secretive means. This is of particular importance given Venter’s
earlier track
record of wanting to create knowledge monopolies through patents. It is
incorrect to characterise what Venter’s team has done as an invention.
Nothing
new has been created. Rather, we have seen the demonstration – albeit
at a
hitherto unknown grand scale – of how we have the technique available
to copy
one of nature’s products. Athena Andreadis, Associate
Professor of Cell
Biology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, writing in
the Huffington Post, puts Venter’s work in clear perspective when she
says: “The Venter work is not a discovery, let
alone a paradigm shift. It's a technological advance and even then not
of
technique but only of scale. The experiment is merely an extension of a
well-known principle that every biology lab uses routinely: namely,
that
bacterial genomes can be modified almost at will (barring a few
indispensable
regions) and in such ways as to turn the bacteria into potent
mini-factories
for specific proteins. The Venter bacterium is actually pedestrian
because it
carries an exact duplicate of a naturally occurring genome. Its only
artificial
aspects are the molecular "flags" that its makers included in the
synthesis to mark the artificial genome for further tracking - standard
operating procedure in all such modifications”.
But such labeling of his work is unlikely to
deter
Craig Venter from using the opportunity to fence off large areas of
research
through applications for broad patents. This is already being talked
about. John
Sulston, chair of the
So, while we continue to wait for humans to
break one
of the final frontiers of science – creation of life – we need also to
be
vigilant of the smaller skirmishes that threaten our ability to widen
the
boundaries of knowledge that deepen our understanding of the world
around us.