Minnesota's SpudCell Completes 5 Generations, Then Stalls Without Ribosomes
Updated
Updated · Scientific American · Jul 14
Minnesota's SpudCell Completes 5 Generations, Then Stalls Without Ribosomes
3 articles · Updated · Scientific American · Jul 14
Summary
Five rounds of division are the current limit for SpudCell, the University of Minnesota synthetic cell that can feed, grow, compete and replicate before its life cycle breaks down.
E. coli ribosomes keep the cell's protein-making machinery running, but SpudCell cannot build ribosomes itself, leaving those borrowed components to deteriorate or become too diluted after repeated splits.
About 30% of descendant cells still carry a full original genome after five generations, the team reported in a bioRxiv preprint, suggesting faulty inheritance from its fragmented DNA design.
That shortfall keeps SpudCell short of a fully living, self-sustaining cell, though researchers say simpler synthetic systems could still prove useful for diagnostics, drug delivery and probing what makes life work.
If a synthetic cell can replicate without being 'alive,' what does this mean for creating truly living, programmable machines?
With a projected $4 trillion bioeconomy, can an open-source cell really overcome the manufacturing hurdles that plague synthetic biology?
SpudCell and the Dawn of Synthetic Life: Scientific Breakthroughs, Limitations, and Societal Impact
Overview
SpudCell, created by Kate Adamala, is the first synthetic cell built entirely from non-living chemical components that can complete a full life cycle. Unlike natural cells, SpudCell has no evolutionary ancestors and features a minimal genome of just 90,000 base pairs. Adamala developed these 'little bubbles'—lipid particles containing DNA rings—that form the basis of SpudCell. It stands out by lacking a cytoskeleton and using a unique division mechanism: proteins produced by SpudCell accumulate at the membrane, eventually causing the cell to split. This breakthrough offers a new, engineerable platform for synthetic biology.