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Tiny 'Living' Robots Figured Out How to Reproduce

Xenobots can reproduce via kinematic replication, which has never been observed before in organisms.

A screenshot from a video of the xenobots in a petri dish collecting stem cells for kinematic replication.
Xenobots in a petri dish collecting stem cells for kinematic replication.
Screenshot: YouTube / University of Vermont / Sam Kriegman, Douglas Blackiston, Michael Levin, and Josh Bongard (Fair Use)

Researchers who developed what they say are the world’s first living robots now report they can reproduce in an unprecedented way, according to a peer-reviewed study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday.

The robots in question aren’t little constructions of silicon and metal—instead, they’re biological machines called xenobots that University of Vermont and Tufts University researchers first described last year. The xenobots are genetically unmodified, cultivated stem cell bundles of the African clawed frog, Xenopus laevis. Joshua Bongard, a University of Vermont computer scientist and robotics expert, referred to them in a press release last January as “novel living machines” that are a “new class of artifact: a living, programmable organism.”

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The xenobots are programmable in the sense that their rudimentary behaviors are mostly pre-determined by their initial shapes. As Gizmodo reporter George Dvorsky wrote last year, “Using an evolutionary algorithm, the researchers devised thousands of possible designs for their novel lifeform, with the capacity for unidirectional locomotion being a fundamental physical requirement. ... Specialized cells were then grown and meticulously assembled to match the form designed by the computer.” The xenobots are capable of living for days to weeks in an aquatic environment using the energy stored in their cells. While their lifetimes can be extended with a nutrient-rich environment, afterwards they inevitably biodegrade.

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“Defining ‘robot’ was never easy, although older technologies sort of obscured that fact and made it seem like we knew what a good definition of ‘robot’ was and how one differed from amoebas, bacteria, fish, humans, etc.,” study author Michael Levin told Gizmodo via email. “This technology makes it clear that we have some important knowledge gaps around the concepts of robot, machine, organism, program, etc.”

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In the new paper, researchers from the two universities as well as Harvard University’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering reported that the xenobots are autonomously making more of themselves using a method previously unknown to be used by any animal or plant species. Levin told CNN that the method, called kinematic replication, left him “astounded.”

The team observed the xenobots, which are made from around 3,000 stem cells each, moving around a petri dish to collect stray stem cells and form them into clumps. Eventually, when enough stem cells were collected, those clumps became new xenobots. Bongard told CNN that while the behavior as initially observed was rare and situation-specific, the team used the supercomputer to test billions of body shapes to determine the ideal form for the collection; it ended up spitting out something that looked a lot like Pac-Man. Just like Pac-Man’s form is ideal for gobbling ghosts, the C-shaped xenobots were much more effective at catching clumps of stem cells and forming new xenobots.

“Most people think of robots as made of metals and ceramics but it’s not so much what a robot is made from but what it does, which is act on its own on behalf of people,” Bongard told CNN. “... The AI didn’t program these machines in the way we usually think about writing code. It shaped and sculpted and came up with this Pac-Man shape.”

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Bongard told CNN that the “shape is, in essence, the program” and “influences how the xenobots behave to amplify this incredibly surprising process.”

Bongard told Gizmodo in an email that frog cells were used because it is one of the most common organisms used in biological studies. Levin and another biologist on the team, Douglas Blackiston, also have extensive experience working with frog tissue. Bongard explained that the team’s previous research into inducing the xenobots into specific behavior led to the discovery they could replicate themselves.

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“In our first experiment from January 2020, we included frog heart muscle tissue into the xenobots and showed that could shuffle, slowly, across the bottom of a Petri dish,” Bongard told Gizmodo. “In a second paper from March 2021, we showed that xenobots can grow small hairs called cilia on their outer surface. They beat these cilia to swim, which results in faster movement than walking through water. We also showed that we could get the bots to ‘See’, ‘remember’, ‘come back’, and ‘tell’: the xenobots were induced to glow green.”

“When they come into contact with blue light, meant to represent something of interest to humans in their environment, they would permanently switch to glowing red,” Bongard added. “By counting the red bots at the end of the experience, we could tell how many bots had ‘seen’ the blue light. We also showed that a randomly-moving xenobot swarm would cause pellets in their environment to be pushed into piles. This was part of the inspiration for this current work... This led to the idea of replacing the pellets with individual cells, to see what would happen.”

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Kinematic replication has been known to occur at the molecular level, but Bongard told Gizmodo it was never observed or believed to occur in organisms. According to the study, researchers verified that the xenobots, not “fluid dynamics and self-assembly,” were responsible for the replication after observing that the stem cells weren’t spontaneously combining in the xenobots’ absence.

In the study, the researchers wrote that kinematic replication and the spontaneous self-replication of the xenobots could help explain the origins of life on Earth. They wrote that more research could advance the amyloid world hypothesis, which “posits that self-assembling peptides were the first molecular entity capable of self-replication, and would thus represent the earliest stage in the evolution of life, predating even the RNA world.” The study could also contribute to the understanding of “how self-amplifying processes can emerge spontaneously, in new ways and in new forms, in abiotic, cellular, or biohybrid machines,” they added. On their website, the team speculates that xenobots could contribute to understanding of cell biology and eventually lead to advancements in regenerative medicine.

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There’s really no telling what future xenobots might be used for, Bongard said. “It’s impossible to know what applications a very early-stage technology like xenobots will have,” Bongard wrote. “All we can do is consider the advantages this technology has over traditional robots, which is that they are small, biodegradable, and happy in water.”

“This means that, with the right regulation in place, they may operate in closed environments: they may be able to inspect plant roots in vertical farms, facilitate cultured meat production, or lower the cost of producing fresh water in desalination facilities,” Bongard said.

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Levin told Gizmodo that possible applications for xenobots may arise in several areas. One is “useful, specific synthetic living machines (to do work in the body, in vitro for sculpting of tissues for transplants, in production facilities/plants, in the environment, in exploration, etc.),” he wrote, while another is “using the xenobots as a sandbox in which to learn how to convince groups of cells to build what we want them to build—once we can do that reliably, we will be able to have really transformative regenerative medicine for birth defects, cancer, traumatic injury, aging, etc. All those situations can be addressed once we understand how to stimulate cells to use their collective problem-solving ability to make the organs and tissues we want them to make.”

Levin added the xenobots might help scientists “better understand and control the goals and behavior of swarms of active agents—in this case cells, but those same lessons will help us make sure that the Internet of Things, swarm robotics, and many other technologies actually have beneficial outcomes.”