
Lisa Poole / AP file
Harvard geneticist George Church shows off the DNA sequence of a colleague.
In the future, genetically modified organisms could be making our medicines, our fuel, our housewares, our houses — and they could even help us remake ourselves. All that may sound like science-fiction, but the future is already arriving, in the form of the bioplastic bottle you may be holding in your hand. Harvard geneticist George Church lays it all out in a new book, "Regenesis: How Synthetic Biology Will Reinvent Nature and Ourselves," written with Ed Regis.
"We are already remaking ourselves and our world, retracing the steps of the original synthesis — redesigning, recoding and reinventing nature itself in the process," they write.
Even the book has been reinvented through DNA: "Regenesis" is one of those rare books that's been the focus of a research paper in the journal Science. All of its 53,426 words, along with 11 images and one Javascript app, were encoded into chunks of DNA, and then read back, just to prove it could be done. But DNA as a next-generation information storage medium is just one of the applications addressed in "Regenesis" — and that's not really all that far out.
If you want to talk about far-out, how about regenerating extinct species, ranging from woolly mammoths to Neanderthals? How about synthetic methods for photosynthesis, the process that turns carbon dioxide, water and sunlight into oxygen and fuel? How about tweaking the human genome to make ourselves immune to multiple viruses? Heck, why not make ourselves virtually immortal?

Basic Books
"Regenesis: How Synthetic Biology Will Reinvent Nature and Ourselves" is written by Harvard geneticist George Church and science writer Ed Regis.
"Regenesis" explores all these issues — the possibilities and the realities, the pros and the cons. Not even the sky is the limit: "We need to get at least some of our genomes and cultures off of this planet or trillions of person-years will be lost," Church and Regis write. They believe that biotechnology is the key to immortality, for the human species and perhaps for individual humans as well. But is all this a biotech pipe dream? I did a reality check during a telephone interview with Church this week. Here's an edited transcript of the Q&A:
Cosmic Log: You’re setting forth quite a hopeful, positive vision in "Regenesis." The way you see it, the application of genetic engineering could get us to the transhumanist age. Are you trying to cast a positive vision as an inspirational goal, or do you feel that this is the realistic way that things will develop?
George Church: Well, it’s not entirely positive. I do describe potential pitfalls. But I feel that most of those pitfalls have solutions as well. It’s positive in the sense that I feel a number of things that often seem like impasses have win-win solutions if you dig deeply enough.
The book is not intended to be inspirational, although I think some people will find it to be so. It’s really intended to have some realism. For some of the points, it’s hard to say when they will arrive.
Q: In some of the areas you discuss, that future has already arrived. For example, you talk about how genetically engineered microbes are being used to turn plant products into plastics. People looking at their water bottles are probably seeing the first evidence of the revolution you describe, but what other innovations are just over the horizon?
A: There are some things that are happening in real time. For example, Joule Unlimited, one of the companies mentioned in the book, just announced a deal with Audi to produce biofuel. Biofuels Digest said this looks like the largest-scale and most realistic and near-term biofuel. The expected price is quoted at $1.28 a gallon. That’s converting carbon dioxide and sunlight into fuel. Other companies are working on similar processes, using the same bacteria, to produce food and other chemicals like plastics.
Many other things in the book are further off, but those are examples of things that are quite close. Multi-virus resistance is somewhere in between. We’ll see some progress on getting that out of laboratories and into industrial processes in the next couple of years.
Q: Over the past year, the Wilson Center has talked about the concerns relating to synthetic biology, and how there should be more regulation of the field. Where do you come down on that issue?
A: Well before the Wilson Center became involved, I was one of the primary advocates for more regulation. This is probably not the attitude of most of my colleagues who are being regulated. My own lab is being regulated as well. I think that there are some areas where regulation could be a big burden, but generally speaking, I find it to be quite positive.
With the Food and Drug Administration, for example, I see a lot of things that still slip through. And most of the things that they block are just tiny increments. Most of the money that’s being spent is just to extend patents, or extend a monopoly that’s based on drug patents. I have similar feelings about the EPA.
What I was mainly asking for, in the early 2000s, was just licensing and surveillance. Everybody who practices synthetic biology should be licensed, including amateurs. Same as cars, right? You’re an amateur car driver, you get a license. Then you don’t assume that just because drivers have licenses, they’re going to behave themselves. You watch the roads, and do radar monitoring to catch speeders. There should be a similar arrangement for synthetic biology, where the stakes are higher.
As far as I know, nobody has ever died because of synthetic biology, while one million people die every year in automotive-related accidents. But I still think the stakes are quite high for synthetic biology.
Q: It sounds as if you’re concerned about the do-it-yourself biology movement...
A: Actually, in a way, I helped start that. The public should be more engaged in science, so that’s a healthy part of it. Do-it-yourself biology has not only synthetic components, but also analytic components. I would put more emphasis on studying your own genome than on synthesizing new ones. But anything that gets people engaged in science so they can make educated political and economic decisions is important. Right now we're making an awful lot of economically important decisions on technology that our leaders don’t understand, and even their staff doesn't understand.
"Genome: The Future Is Now" profiles Harvard's George Church.
Q: If you had five minutes with political leaders – at the White House, or in Congress – what’s the one thing that would you want them to understand better about synthetic biology?
A: They’re actually doing a fairly good job. They correctly perceive that this is the era of the bio-economy. ... I think there is a tendency to give in to lobbies. For example, even though many, many experts felt that going from corn to ethanol was a bad idea economically and scientifically, they still gave in to it. Now, during a drought year, they should be able to back away from that. But the corn lobby is powerful.
The policymakers understand that the bio-economy is on the rise. There’s almost nothing that we can’t make better and cheaper using biotechnology, including computers and all sorts of consumer goods and chemicals. But the details matter. I guess that’s what I’d use my five minutes for. It’s not sufficient to identify a major new thrust. It’s how you do it. There need to be more technical people in positions of power, and the people who are in power need to spend more time on the technical issues.
Q: Getting back to that issue of vision vs. reality, there’s been a lot of talk over the past few years about how the genomic revolution was oversold, and how applying the findings relating to the human genome has been harder than people thought. At the same time, we’re hearing about studies to nail down the genetic roots of all sorts of traits relating to wellness and illness. You’re involved in some of those studies. Do you feel as if the promise was there, and it just has taken longer than expected for the revolution to kick in? Or do you feel as if there was something that researchers missed in the first years of that revolution, which really needed to be present in order for the revolution to take off?
A: I don’t recall what was promised by whom. I certainly did not promise a particular time line for delivery of a particular amount of value to society. Battelle issued a report on the genome revolution, and claimed that there has already been a 140-fold return on investment – something around $700 billion. You’ll have to draw your own conclusions about that report. That was issued in 2011, so it was within a few years of when we said we were going to finish the project. When you get 140-to-1 return on your investment within just a few years, that strikes me as better than your average government decision-making process.
A lot of people have the misperception that the human genome sequence was complete in 2001, which was five years ahead of schedule, but it is still not complete. At least 2001 was the end of the "race," so to speak, so we then got serious about dropping the cost. The cost has dropped by a millionfold since then. You don’t get that in any other industry. If we had followed Moore’s Law, the prediction of an affordable human genome would have been in 2040. Actually, we have an affordable genome, by many people’s standards, today.
That gets us to a second misperception: People think either that we don’t have an affordable genome, or that the genome we have is not useful. I would maintain that there’s not a person on the planet who’s getting standard medical care, who shouldn’t get their genome sequenced.
It may be that for quite a few of those people, the genome would come back and say, “You’re pretty healthy. You’ll die eventually, but we don’t know what you’ll die of.” That will be the report for many people. But you don’t know if you’re one of those people in advance. You don’t know if you’re going to have a fire or have a car accident before you get fire or accident insurance. But you do it anyway, just because the consequences of not having insurance could be catastrophic to the economy of your family. Similarly, the consequences of getting one of these diseases, which can be influenced by your genes, is catastrophic to your family. So why take the risk? It’s only $4,000, after all.
I think it’s come down to the point where the quality is high, the cost is low, and the interpretability is high. Not for everything, but for some medical issues. I can’t think of a reason why someone with decent health care and income shouldn’t be sequenced today.
Q: There’s been a lot of talk about the $1,000 genome as a crucial price point, and you mentioned $4,000. Considering how far it’s come, from billions of dollars, how do you expect the price curve to develop over the next year, two years or five years?
A: I was one of the people who promoted, as a goal, the $1,000 to $10,000 genome. I wasn’t specific on where in that range it should be, but it should be something that’s affordable over a lifetime. People locked into the $1,000 number, which I don’t think is the best number, but anyway … I think what will happen is that it’ll plateau somewhere around where it is right now, and the quality of interpretation will continue to improve.
That’s similar to the experience we had when computers came out of the stratosphere and the cost fell to thousands of dollars. People still buy computers for thousands of dollars; they’re just way, way better. But $1,000 is definitely attractive both for a computer and a genome. The difference is, you throw away your computer after three or four years. The genome, you keep for 80 years or however long you’ve got left.
So I think within the next year or two, the cost will probably stay at $4,000, but you’ll get better quality of interpretation, better software. There are some technologies over the horizon that may bring the price down to hundreds of dollars over the next two to five years. I know they’re coming. But this is one of those places where there’s enough of a pause in this breathtaking curve that it’s a good time to think seriously about it. It’s just like whenever the latest iPhone or Android comes out, that’s when you want to make the decision – rather than waiting forever, because everything keeps improving.
Q: Do you think we’ll see all sorts of products on the market for genome analysis, like iPhone vs. Android vs. Nokia vs. iTouch? Will there have to be a lot of consumer education about the various products?
A: Having the choices we have now for computers and cellphones is a wonderful problem to have. I think there will be multiple genomic products as well. But the main reason for consumer education is not necessarily deciding which method you want. Right now, the highest-quality genome available, which I think is ready for clinical applications, is from Complete Genomics. People will need "Consumer Reports" types of independent comparative assessments, so they can judge this for themselves.
But even more important, they need to be educated about the benefits and risks of looking at particular parts of the genome, so they get educated in advance about what they’re looking for.
To some extent, this was also needed for other technologies. For cars, you need to have driver’s ed. For computers, well, there should have been more instruction than there was. The fire hose of the Internet was opened on humanity in 1993, when we went from virtually zero websites to millions in one year, and nobody was prepared. Nobody really said, “Here’s a one-page description of all the risks out there – there’s identity theft, there’s fraud, spam, hackers, trafficking of illegal material, etc.” People just blithely said, “That’s the price of being in the Wild West.”
The more powerful the technology, the more important it is to have that kind of education, and to have licensing and surveillance as well.
Q: So, other than reading “Regenesis,” what would you suggest that we do to get educated?
A: Specifically for personal genomics, there is an organization called pgEd.org that’s focusing on educating the public, including high schools.
There’s another popular book called “Here Is a Human Being,” by Misha Angrist, which is fun for getting an anecdotal description.
To some extent, the best thing to do is to jump in and get your genome done. You could start with one of the cheaper services, but the problem is if you start with a cheap service and you don’t actually learn anything, you might not go on.
People will figure it out. There will be an increasing number of Web resources to lead you through this.
More about synthetic biology:
- Genes in your email? Why not?
- Microbes on the genetic frontier
- What is life? Follow the bits
- Genetic science oozes out of garages
- What should be done about synthetic life?
- Your DNA blueprint may disappoint, scientists say
- One-third of Americans back ban on synthetic biology
Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.


This sounds like we may soon be able to get our own personal genetic genome analysis from our general practitioners soon .
How could anyone not like articles like these ?
Nice job again .
I agree, an excellent article and very exciting developments.
Only thing I don't like about articles like this...the results for extending our lifespans significantly will come after I am dead and burned. DAMNIT! Please hurry up I would love to take a 300 year long space flight that I actually lived through!
Take the best possible care of yourself that you can...and perhaps consider cryonics.
The main problem is understanding science by the general public. Any science.
Here are some examples of what real science look like: AUTOMOBILE, you don't need to be expert to understand what it does, how it works; IPAD, IPHONE, you don't need to heavily educate people to convince them they need it; COMPUTER, you don't need to use laws to force people to buy it; GOOGLE, never tried to put their "technical" peers into political power to secure future fundings or push product; SPACE EXPLORATION; success and failure can be verified, sophisticated engineering can be explained to the general public, verifiable track record of improving human life.
Years ago, during one of my internships - we experimented with the use of Chromium for Photosynthesis. The results were nothing less than astounding!! Using Chromium to synthesize the molecules in a glass of water made it possible too see how easy it would be to turn Ocean Salt Water into drinkable water; all with a little bit of Chromium to initiate the photosynthesis. Let me tell you, over my many years working with Chromium of all sorts, it never ceases to amaze me! Over decades of research and development of Chromium derivatives, I have seen my share of 'crock-pot' claims and inventions! Let me make it clear - Chromium is the real deal!!
*Disclaimer - I own NO stock or vested interest in anything Chromium related. These statements are simply fact from my years of research in the field.
Poachers are killing off animals faster than a synthetic mutation at rat farm.They are not even close to solving any synthetic prothesis. They should look at the last million years before trying to invent a new species. And I don't mean to be sitting doing nothing for the earth. But unless it cures arthritis this world has no use for synthetic life forms killing us off the first chance it gets. They can't even control themselves but they are gonna control evolution. "Man can not even breed themselves right, let alone anything else". But they want to invent a new sub species of synthetics. Whatevr. And as far as the rant, science can always prove me wrong. I would be happier for it. And not so worried. But science has not kept anything from exploding out of hand. And then they try to stp it. Ya ya so nonsciencetists are worse, that may be our undoing. Maybe I am wrong I been wrong a million times before.
There's so much wrong with your thinking that I hardly know where to begin, but we can start with your first sentence: what do you mean by a "synthetic mutation at rat farm" and why does it necessarily kill things (I assume rats) fast enough that you thought it was good to compare to poaching?
Lawyers, have a large list of drugs that have been cleared by the FDA, and advertise on TV, that any person that used any of these drugs, that have ruined their health or just short of death, or loved ones who have died from these drugs, that were advertised as a wonderful drug to make your life better. It seems the list of these drugs is growing from day to day. So in other words, don't trust the FDA to insure these drugs are good for you. Will these bio-engineered products be approved by the FDA?, then wind up on the lawyers list of bad drugs or products that will harm a person.
The FDA is a piss poor indicator of quality, true, but making people get licenses for these sorts of things at least creates a databank and registry that could be useful just for keeping track of people who might be doing something dangerous. That way at least when something goes wrong we might be able to track it to the source more easily. As long as the licensing requirements aren't too onerous and there's no limit to the number of licenses I don't see a problem.
As a scientist working in this field, I am continually amazing and impressed at the breakthroughs being made. That being said, it should be stated that we do not even understand how a single human cell works, let alone how those cells organize into such a complex organism. I do think that eventually we will have a full understanding of the code and how it works, but we are quite a ways away. I think the computer programmers will end up taking over a lot of this work as the sheer amount of data being generated is too complex for anyone one brain to analyze and understand. In addition, until about 10 years ago we weren't even aware of an entire layer of genetic regulation in the cell (miRNA), and this understanding has transformed the field. I highly doubt that miRNA will be the last surprise that the genome has in store for us....
Good point, John - 4000581. You're a damn genius!
John, I appreciate that you admit:" we do not even understand how a single human cell works, let alone how those cells organize into such a complex organism." Yet, we have laws and systems to force people to take the vaccines, drugs and invasive diagnosis & treatments that were developed under the ignorance. How about ask your peers spend more time on science, less time on political lobbying. Americans have always supported science and innovation voluntarily, it is your industry's practice of using force has turned off the support of American people.
That said, wouldn't it be great to be able to identify victims, I meant, people who cannot tolerate immunization in the form of injections?
Last year, I skipped the flu vaccine, and spent the entire winter fighting off various forms of the same flu in many different buildings. I was probably the carrier of these rapidly evolving viruses that hit me differently each and every week. It was horrible. This year, my self study, I will take the flu vaccine, and, see if it helps.
Simple, anyone could do their own self study to see if it is worth the money for a flu shot, after all, it comes back every year, almost like clockwork. However, if one is sensitive to vaccinations, don't do it. My mom won't because of that reason.
In response to Doojohn, talk about having a personal agenda! Without knowing anything about me you feel like its your place to lecture me and my peers about how we are not doing enough science are are spending too much time promoting our political agenda.
After working in the field in a number of countries (Canada, USA, Netherlands), and working with a wide range of scientists, I have notice that not a single one of my peers has tried to push any type of political agenda, let alone use "force" to accomplish it. What kind of "force" are me and my peers using? Is it Jedi mind power?? Please, please let it be Jedi mind power, I always wanted to do that!
Do you know anything about scientific research or the people that do it? I think you must be confusing research scientists with lobbyists. We're pretty different.
Or maybe you are just interested in pushing your own agenda?
~waves hand~ "These aren't the scapegoats you're looking for"
I have read articles like this. Scientific breakthroughs will cure all disease, we will be able to grow our own personal organs, everyone will have a flying car, anti gravity, light speed, our own personal badass robot helper etc. I remember reading these articles in the early 90s. They all promised with in the next 10 to 20 years we would be seeing this stuff. I'm not bashing this man for his beliefs, I'm just saying having too much faith in human inginuity is like having too much faith that if you pray had enough God will solve all your problems. If you live this life style you might be forever in disapointment.
Don't be so impatient. If you take a longer view and look back on what we have accomplished, I think you will attain a more realistic expectation of what we can expect in the future...and the future is bright. Do you think about Curiosity as just another space mission, or that it is a plutonium-powered, self-propelled, remotely-controlled scientific laboratory investigating another planet for clues that could indicate life (and that we Terrans are not alone). In 1965, the original Star Trek series portrayed some 'amazing' devices (at the time). Amongst them were the 'communicator' and the 'tricorder'. We currently have 'communicators' far advanced from what was envisioned then--the smartphone. Soon we'll have something akin to a 'tricorder'--probably a smartphone that accepts plug-in sensors and, oh, there'll be an app for that. LiftPort has plans for a space elevator on the Moon--they are looking for feasibility funding...and they should get it. NASA just contracted with a 3D printing firm to look at applying this technology on the Moon, in space and, eventually, Mars, to build structures in situ. This could lower the cost of getting necessary materials in space from $10-20,000 per pound to just a few hundred. A UC-Davis professor has a working model of a 3D printer that could build a house in 20 hours. Sure, we blew it on predicting other things (flying cars, etc.). However, please appreciate what we have recently done and what is in the pipeline...
Predictions of the future are just people playing fortune-teller. We don't have our flying cars or antigravity, but on the other hand, how many people predicted the Internet, or the fact that in the 21st century we'd have mobile phones that are only a few degrees away from Star Trek-style tricorders? It's not that we aren't making sufficient technological progress, it's that we're making it in different fields than expected. That's to be expected (paradoxically).
So much has happened in the last forty years...I'm amazed.
Then, I look out at the beautiful landscapes and the other animals we share them with, and, wonder at the price, long term, we are paying for this technological innovation.
The human citizen in the US does have a lot of off gasses...and so do many of the toys the human citizen in US deems necessary...dish washers....factories....automobiles...
Instead of Star Trek our future might be the borg.
Resistance is futile...
That would be even better than I'd hoped. Long have I hoped that I'd get to shuck this clumsy fleshy prison for a state-of-the-art, mechanical body, but if I'm assimilated, I won't even have to pay for it!
Did someone say we might be able to revive extinct species? Somebody get Jeff Goldblum on the phone...
This is CATASTROPHIC! Revelation 9 warns against this.
First, Rev. 9:3-6 (CJB) says, ". . . Onto the earth came locusts, and they were given power like the power scorpions have on earth. 4 They were instructed not to harm the grass on the earth, any green plant or any tree, but only the people who did not have the seal of God on their foreheads. 5 The locusts were not allowed to kill them, only to inflict pain on them for five months; and the pain they caused was like the pain of a scorpion sting. In those days people will seek death but will not find it; they will long to die, but death will elude them."
Also, extension of human life without decency, morality, and most importantly God will only prolong the problems of mankind. Rev. 9 further states that mankind "even then did not turn from what they had made with their own hands — they did not stop worshiping demons and idols made of gold, silver, bronze, stone and wood, which cannot see or hear or walk.“trust in the Lord Yeshua [Jesus], and you will be saved" (Acts 16:31).
Also in the news: The sky is falling.
Oh no! The Bible says we shouldn't do something?
Quick question: let's say that I have more faith in scientific journals than some ancient story book that's been re-translated three dozen times. Do I still have to care then?
Simply, yes. Man's predictions and "observations" have discrepancies and contradictions and are sometimes just wrong. For instance, how many times have the meteorologists inaccurately predicted the weather? Or how many times has the FDA changed its mind about a specific food's (such as the egg's) health benefits and harms?
The Bible's predictions are unchanging, completely accurate, and usually ahead of science's observations. Prove what Biblical predictions are false.
Also, that "ancient story book" even predicted your response:
Since man could not solve all of his problems in his previous 6,000 years of existence, he still will not solve them in another 6,000+ years. Mankind is eternally hopeless unless they submit themselves to their Creator Jesus Christ.
That makes no sense. During what was probably the worst time in European history (the Dark Ages), most Europeans were submitting themselves to that guy. Things only got better once people started to work outside of that box, i.e. Enlightenment.
Also, I'm not religous in any way, but I'm pretty sure there's nothing in the Bible that says or suggests that technology is a doomed enterprise and useless for fixing our material concerns during our mortal lives.
Humans will never submit to God or even nature. We will find the limits of our universe and then find a way around them. Science is stronger than mysticism.
During the Dark Ages, people were submitting themselves to the POPE, not to Jesus Christ. Some of the people who submitted themselves to Christ were martyred, i.e. John Huss, John Wycliffe, and William Tyndale, while the others went on to start the Protestant Reformation which actually freed Europe from its worst time in history.
Also, Judeo-Biblical Christianity (not Roman Catholic, Mormon, or other strange derivatives) is not mysticism. Yes, science is stronger than mysticism. However, God created science, and God and the Bible are not myths, legends, meaningless manmade stories, or any other form of garbage but instead real and true.
Prove what parts of the Bible are false. Evolution, the Apocrypha, the Book of Mormon, and all that other crap are easy to disprove.
"...unless they submit themselves to their Creator Jesus Christ."
As opposed to all the other creative deities that billions of people believe in? Is there a testable, falsifiable way to compare those beliefs (as well as the various flavors of non-belief)?
No?
That's why religion and philosophy aren't science...
*insert your god name here*sure sent mankind a strange boat...modern technology...love it.
We will look back at this as the opening of Pandoras Box, I am not speaking as an alarmist but logically any set of unknown outcomes are possible. Imagine the scientists studying Africanised bees, well as you know they escaped and without detail you know what happened, this even more easily could occur with genome manipulation the possibilities are infinite. The often repeated movie themes on a killer virus could come about. Or some alteration of species to unbalance their present levels. This is not good not good at all.
The statement "anything could happen" could apply to almost any technological advancement, or for that matter, any number of natural forces outside of human control. Being afraid of unknown and unpredicted consequences is absurd, because you're literally scared of nothing; just making up things to be frightened of.
Killer viruses already exist. Any "balance" seen in an ecosystem is coincidental, and usually temporary, since all animals are constantly adapting and evolving. If you're going to warn against the possibility of science gone wrong, you could at least try scenarios in which nature isn't already beating us.
Fear. The great captor.
First we got "Industrial Disease" next we'll have "genetic Disease" Nothing like a Brave New World and then OOPS!
So... did you somehow not know that we already have genetic diseases? I suppose that this science could be used to create more, but somehow I think there's more of a market for using it to cure the ones we have.
We are already a self culling species of human...the faster we go the better, yeah?
LOL
Should have said synthetic genetic disease for better understanding of what I meant.
neanderthals... immunity... synthetic photosynthesis... immortality... BLA! ...how about evolving the information system of biology, displace DNA like it did RNA, and usher in an exotropically richer form of life
now that´s talking far-out
I have no idea why, but, it seems this may have all happened before...
this branch of science would give best and bright future for the coming generation. being a civil engineer i give thumps up for this perfect branch.
?
We exterminated their whole species and now you want to bring one back and make it a guinea pig. That's heinous and despicable.