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Scientists replicate DNA-like substance Breakthrough holds promise for biotech Apr. 20, 2012 07:35 PM Bloomberg NEW YORK - Scientists moved a step closer to synthesizing new life forms in the laboratory after researchers showed that artificial genetic material called XNA can be replicated in the test tube much like real DNA. Researchers at the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Britain demonstrated for the first time a way to extract information from the artificial genetic molecules and mass-produce copies of them. The finding, published Thursday in the journal Science, shows that DNA and its sister molecule RNA may not be the only chemical structures upon which a living unit can be based. "Life is based on this amazing ability of DNA and RNA to store and propagate information," said Philipp Holliger, a Medical Research Council molecular biologist and senior author on the study. "We have shown that the basic functions of DNA and RNA can be recapitulated" with new artificial molecules. The scientists invented a lab method for making copies of synthetic DNA. They also developed a way to make XNA fragments that evolve with desired properties. In particular, they created XNA fragments that could bind with great specificity to a molecular target in the HIV virus. The discovery could create a new platform for devising targeted drugs to treat a variety of diseases, researchers said. "This brings us one big step closer to artificial life," said Gerald Joyce, a biochemist at Scripps Research Institute in San Diego. "The heart of what life is, is the replication of genetic information," he said. Joyce wrote a commentary accompanying the study. |