Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Health & Fitness
  4. News

Scientists just used CRISPR to encode a GIF into the DNA of a virus

Add as a preferred source on Google

Is there a movie you love enough to have an image from it tattooed onto your body? Soon you may be able to go one step further and have the entirety of one of its scenes spliced into your DNA. After all, what better way to show your love for pre-Phantom Menace George Lucas than to have the climactic Death Star meridian trench sequence from Star Wars permanently etched into your genetic makeup, courtesy of gene editing tech CRISPR?

A variation of this was achieved recently by Harvard scientists, who have demonstrated how E. coli bacteria is capable of storing images and movies in its DNA.

Recommended Videos

“We wanted to test whether the CRISPR-Cas system in bacteria could be used to capture complex information with a time component in living bacteria,” Dr. Seth Shipman, a neuroscientist at Harvard who led the experiment, told Digital Trends. “To do that, we encoded images and a movie into DNA and delivered them to cells expressing two proteins from the CRISPR system: Cas1 and Cas2. The reason we care about this is that we want to create living molecular recorders, cells that can capture new information and store that information in their genome, this is a way that we could pilot such a system.”

The movie footage the researchers used isn’t quite the Star Wars: A New Hope climax, but it’s no less an iconic part of cinema history. It’s a 36 x 26-pixel GIF displaying a galloping horse filmed by Eadweard Muybridge in one of the first motion pictures ever shot — way back in 1878. Using DNA sequencing tech, Shipman and colleagues were able to both store the data and then later reassemble it with 90 percent accuracy. Doing this not only showed that DNA is capable of storing the images, but also of doing so in the correct order.

So is there any real-world use for this? “Not quite yet, but hopefully on the near horizon,” Shipman said. “We want to use this technology to create cells that can record biological or environmental signals.” As to what’s next for the project, he noted that the “next step is to hook the input of this system to a biological system, then we might be able to use it to gather information that we don’t currently have.”

A research paper describing the work was published this week in the journal Nature.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
As if the plate wasn’t already full, AI is about to worsen the global e-waste crisis
New report highlights a rising environmental concern
Stack of graphics cards and motherboards in a landfill site e-waste

AI is already changing how the world works, but it’s also quietly making one of our biggest environmental problems even worse. And no, this isn’t about energy consumption this time. It’s about the hardware. Because every smarter AI model comes with a physical cost.

AI is about to supercharge the e-waste problem

Read more
Smart glasses are finding a surprise niche — Korean drama and theater shows
Urban, Night Life, Person

Every year, millions of people follow Korean content without speaking a word of the language. They stream shows with subtitles, read translated lyrics, and find workarounds. But live theater has always been a different problem — you can't pause or rewind it. That's the problem: a Korean startup thinks it's cracked, and Yuroy Wang was one of the first to try it. The 22-year-old Taipei retail worker is a K-pop fan who loves Korean culture but doesn't speak the language. When he went to see "The Second Chance Convenience Store," a touring play based on a Korean novel that was a bestseller in Taiwan, he expected supertitles. What he got instead was a pair of chunky black-framed AI-powered glasses sitting on his nose, translating the dialogue in real time directly on the lenses. "As soon as I found out they were available, I couldn't wait to try them," he said. Wang is part of a growing audience discovering that smart glasses, a category of tech that has struggled to find mainstream purpose for years, might have just found their calling in the most unexpected of places: live Korean theater.

How do the glasses work?

Read more
Amazon thinks you love AI, so it has launched a special storefront for AI-powered gadgets
Google AI mode mockup showing new feature

You're browsing for a new laptop — one has a better processor, another has more RAM, a third says "AI-powered" in bold letters, and you're not entirely sure what that means. But Amazon has noticed you pausing on that third one, and it has thoughts. The company just launched an AI Store on Amazon.in — a dedicated storefront that rounds up AI-enabled gadgets across categories, from smartphones and laptops to refrigerators and washing machines. So, instead of you wading through spec sheets trying to figure out which "AI feature" actually does something useful, the store spells it out for you.

What the AI store actually is

Read more