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Washington: Man-made lifeforms are already in the works. Now, scientists have claimed these synthetic organisms engineered to use carbon dioxide as a raw material could help humans settle Mars one day.
Craig Venter, an American biologist who made headlines last year by creating the world's first synthetic organism, claimed that his team is now trying to design cells that can use atmospheric carbon dioxide to make food, fuel, plastics and other products.
This ability would obviously have huge implications here on Earth, but it could also help make Mars -- whose thin atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide -- a more livable place, Venter said at an event organised by NASA recently.
"These kinds of processes will allow us to make almost anything needed there from that CO2 environment," Venter was quoted as saying by LiveScience.
In May 2010, Venter and his team announced that they had created the first living organism with a synthetic genome.
The biologists constructed the genome of the bacterium Mycoplasma mycoides from many preassembled units of DNA. Then they transplanted the genome into the cell of a closely related species that had been emptied of its own genome.
The "host" bacterium soon began to function and reproduce just as a naturally occurring M. mycoides would.
The feat was more than just a neat trick. It showed that custom-designing organisms to do all sorts of helpful tasks is eminently possible -- and may not be that far off.
Creating new lifeforms could help "solve some of the fundamental problems of providing sufficient energy, food, clean water and medicines," Venter said.
Venter, who also led a team that decoded the human genome a decade ago, said his top priority is using synthetic life to help solve these big problems on Earth.
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