Injecting Life with Computers
Ehud Shapiro
Although
electronic computers are the only "computer species" we are accustomed to, the
mathematical notion of a programmable computer has nothing to do with wires and
logic gates. In fact, Alan Turing's notional computer, which marked in 1936 the
birth of modern computer science and still stands at its heart, has greater
similarity to natural biomolecular machines such as
the ribosome and polymerases than to electronic computers. Recently, a new
"computer species" made of biological molecules has emerged. These simple
molecular computers inspired by the Turing machine, of which a trillion can fit
into a microliter, do not compete with electronic
computers in solving complex computational problems; their potential lies
elsewhere. Their molecular scale and their ability to interact directly with the
biochemical environment in which they operate suggest that in the future they
may be the basis of a new kind of "smart drugs": molecular devices equipped with
the medical knowledge to perform disease diagnosis and therapy inside the living
body. They would detect and diagnose molecular disease symptoms and, when
necessary, administer the requisite drug molecules to the cell, tissue or organ
in which they operate. In the talk we review this new research direction and
report on preliminary steps carried out in our lab towards realizing its
vision.