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Biotech Robotics

Robobug: Scientists Clad Bacterium With Graphene To Make a Working Cytobot 41

Zothecula writes By cladding a living cell with graphene quantum dots, researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) claim to have created a nanoscale biomicrorobot (or cytobot) that responds electrically to changes in its environment. This work promises to lay the foundations for future generations of bio-derived nanobots, biomicrorobotic-mechanisms, and micromechanical actuation for a wide range of applications. "UIC researchers created an electromechanical device — a humidity sensor — on a bacterial spore. They call it NERD, for Nano-Electro-Robotic Device. The report is online at Scientific Reports, a Nature open access journal."
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Robobug: Scientists Clad Bacterium With Graphene To Make a Working Cytobot

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  • Not a robot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 27, 2015 @12:34AM (#49351991)

    From the article:
    "We’ve taken a spore from a bacteria [sic], and put graphene quantum dots on its surface – and then attached two electrodes on either side of the spore," said Berry. "Then we change the humidity around the spore. When the humidity drops, the spore shrinks as water is pushed out. As it shrinks, the quantum dots come closer together, increasing their conductivity, as measured by the electrodes. We get a very clean response – a very sharp change the moment we change humidity."

    So clearly, it's not a robot, it's a sensor.

    • It may not be a cytobot but the synergy is 110% buzz word compliant. We put a bug in an electrical field and it reacted in a way similar to an elastomer or sponge.

    • But it is a first step. And a sensible one if you're looking to hijack biology to make nano-scale machinery.

      Step 2 is remote control, like what they're doing with cockroaches.

    • if it's human remote-controlled, IT'S A DRONE!
  • So will God Goo get us first, or AI?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      >Re:Google "God Goo"

      I'm too afraid to; I half expect to see Rule 34 of the Almighty.

  • here we come.

    • seriously

      this is the terrorist attack of 2215 or 2315

      i'm no luddite, technological advance gives us just as much good as bad

      but as we advance further and further, the power to do greater and greater good, and greater and greater evil, will be in the hands of smaller and smaller groups of people

      such that some deranged cult will be able to kill us all in a few centuries. and then one of them will choose to do that

      man, we really have to get off this planet

      we need an insurance policy badly

      • by Anonymous Coward

        this is the terrorist attack of 2215 or 2315

        Oww, bullshit. 'The terrorists' are by and large people who are uneducated, poor and without access to modern amenities, whether because they live in a 'pariah nation' or in a ghetto in Paris. This is what turns them into 'terrorists' in the first place. Hi-tech warfare requires marketable skills and healthy attitude, and these don't mix well with the circumstances that create terrorists, therefore people who have developed those skills rarely engage in terrorism.

        • terrorists took down the world trade center with boxcutters

          you don't seem to understand what determination means

          • by Anonymous Coward

            I can see the cartoon now:

            Two Arab-looking guys in a basement, ineffectually sawing at steel beams with tiny knives.

            "When Osama said we could take down the World Trade Center with boxcutters, I don't think this is what he meant!"

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          You've never had to work around a bunch of PETA members, I take it. A lot of them are trust fund brats with enough money to buy used gene splicing equipment off eBay and the idea that Earth would be better off without humans.

  • by mjgday ( 173139 ) on Friday March 27, 2015 @04:45AM (#49352549)

    All the clever sensing is done by the bacteria, all they've done is attach a big flag to the bacteria so that when it does what it does we can tell.

    Whilst this may be very useful, it's hardly outwitting nature, or creating new forms of life, or doing anything that'd be likely to be disastrous in any way.

    It's as tho putting a radio collar on a polar bear turns it into some cyborg killing machine.

    • It's as tho putting a radio collar on a polar bear turns it into some cyborg killing machine.

      Not really a good comparison; the polar bear is already a killing machine, and putting a radio collar on it "could" make it a cyborg. It's either a cyborg killing machine, or a radio tracked killing machine.

      The bacteria are in essence, armored AND tracked, which makes them pretty a more like Emo kids with smart phones who tweet their every action. Sounds counter productive; "LOL, just arrived at the Colon and man, this dude is whack!" Sorry, my slang is 10 years un-hip.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    In other news, in a breakthrough experiment scientists have scaled the experiment up to the macroscopic scale and strapped magnets to a pigeon, which now appears to react to other magnets in its vicinity.

  • " a humidity sensor — on a bacterial spore. They call it NERD,..."

    For the first NERD I would have used a pizza-detector and not a humidity sensor.

    And I always thought spores had humidity sensors built-in, after all it's kind of their 'thing'.

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