
Scientist and poet embed poem in DNA of near-immortal bacteria, creating a living artwork that could last billions of years
Canadian poet Christian Bök and University of Texas chemical engineer Lydia Contreras have embedded a poem into the DNA of one of Earth's toughest organisms. This microbe could preserve art for billions of years.
In a project that fuses biotechnology with literature, the duo used Deinococcus radiodurans, nicknamed 'Conan the Bacteria', to record verses inside its genetic code. This microbe can survive extreme radiation, freezing, dehydration, and even the vacuum of space, making it virtually immortal by our standards.
Under ideal conditions, it could persist for geological timescales, safeguarding human culture far beyond our civilization's lifespan.The research is part of Bök's decades-long literary-scientific experiment, The Xenotext, to turn poetry into a living, self-replicating artifact.
Deinococcus radiodurans is considered one of the most resilient lifeforms known to science. Its DNA repair mechanisms allow it to survive doses of radiation thousands of times higher than lethal levels for humans.
Scientists believe it could remain intact for billions of years, making it an ideal 'time capsule' for human knowledge and art.
The encoded poem, 'Orpheus,' begins with the line 'Any lifestyle is primitive.' When the bacterium 'reads' this genetic sequence, it produces a protein chain that translates into a second, complementary poem, 'Eurydice,' beginning with 'The fairy is pink with shine.' The protein also glows red, creating a visual embodiment of the poem's imagery.This transformation is possible thanks to a mutually bijective cipher developed by Bök, where each letter of one poem corresponds to a fixed letter in the other. According to a CPG article, the system, which took four years to complete, ensures that both works are perfectly interlinked.Bök first attempted the idea 2015 with a more fragile bacterium, publishing the results in The Xenotext: Book 1. But his ultimate goal was to work with D. radiodurans, whose near-indestructibility would ensure the poem's survival even in catastrophic scenarios.His latest book, The Xenotext: Book 2, represents the result of 25 years of research, trials, and errors.'I wanted to create something that could survive the Sun,' said Bök as quoted by CPG. 'It's a gesture towards preserving human culture across planetary timescales.'Contreras, whose laboratory specializes in the genetic manipulation of D. radiodurans, partnered with Bök to make the project feasible. She called the work 'philosophically exciting,' as it bridges the gap between DNA's genetic language and humans' written language.
Beyond its artistic dimension, the project showcases DNA's potential as a long-term data storage medium. Unlike digital files that decay over decades or centuries, biological archives could last indefinitely, perhaps even serving as a message to extraterrestrial civilizations.
The project's name and structure are inspired by the ancient Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice, a story of love, loss, and the attempt to bring something back from the underworld. In this case, the 'resurrection' is a set of immortal verses engraved in the very code of life.For Bök, it's both a scientific milestone and a poetic statement: 'In the end, it's about how we store information that will survive forever.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
It's all about numbers: Mumbai gets first privately-funded institute for math research
Mumbai: India, said Fields medallist Manjul Bhargava, must fall in love with mathematics again. Not as a "drudgery of formulas" but as an act of "exploration." Bhargava, Canadian by nationality but of Indian origin, believes classrooms need an overhaul—"experimental, playful," he said, with teachers "trained" to spark curiosity. Speaking to TOI on the sidelines of the launch of the Lodha Mathematical Sciences Institute (LMSI), he added: "I'm happy with the new textbooks and the changes brought in them. But they will only show impact in a few years." On the scientific advisory council of LMSI, Bhargava will lead sessions on arithmetic statistics, its new developments, and future directions. State cabinet minister Mangal Prabhat Lodha called it a school "not for an individual, not for a business, but for the nation that always prioritised knowledge over all and for India that gave so much math to the world." You Can Also Check: Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai | Gold Rates Today in Mumbai | Silver Rates Today in Mumbai Entirely devoted to post-doctoral research, LMSI is India's first privately funded mathematics institute, backed by the Lodha Foundation with a Rs 20,000-crore endowment. "We realised that for any nation to become strong, we ought to have original thinking and promote innovation," said Abhishek Lodha, CEO and MD of Lodha Developers. The privately funded mathematics research institute in the country is completely free, he added. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Could This NEW Collagen Blend Finally Reduce Your Cellulite? Vitauthority Learn More Undo Founding director V Kumar Murthy—who earlier led Toronto's Fields Institute—described math as the hidden scaffolding of modern life: the foundation for finance, engineering, and technology. Economist Nachiket Mor, also on the advisory panel, noted that models built in the West often collapse in India because they rarely account for "unique characteristics" like limited liquidity and higher viscosity of adjustment. "This reality makes it all the more urgent for us to build deep capacity mathematics," he said. Murthy explained that LMSI would begin not with students but with teachers. Ten senior number theorists—working in a field almost untouched in India—have been chosen to seed the effort. Faculty will return to their classrooms with fresh knowledge, passing it on. As President, Murthy said he plans to travel across the country, meeting mathematicians firsthand and mapping who is doing what. The aim is to build a network where the "brightest minds" are spotted early, handpicked, and nurtured—whether a graduate is on the verge of a breakthrough or a scholar is trying to prove a theorem. By December 2026, LMSI will host the first Indian Congress of Mathematicians, showcasing contributions of mathematicians of Indian origin worldwide. Ashish Singh, former chief secretary of Maharashtra and now chief mentor of the Lodha Foundation, said the idea of LMSI grew from parents failing to convince children that mathematics is foundational to all STEM knowledge. The institute, he stressed, is one where scholars can do pure research—"no onerous administrative responsibilities, no responsibility of teaching. There's no other responsibility other than the responsibility of pushing the boundaries of knowledge itself. " Inviting those for whom mathematics is a calling, Singh spoke of those who see "symmetry in numbers," find "beauty in logic," and dream like Ramanujan "standing on the shore of the infinite." The big dream, he added, is for an Indian to win a Fields Medal in the next decade—or perhaps to nurture someone who "looks up from his chalkboard and glimpses the truth no one else has seen, some elegant, exact, and entirely human moment of insight. " Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.


Economic Times
11 hours ago
- Economic Times
Workplace bullying hinders employees' creative thinking, engagement in side projects: IIM study
Synopsis A study by IIM Lucknow reveals that workplace bullying and negative behaviors stifle creative thinking and discourage innovative side projects among employees. The research emphasizes that such mistreatment drains employees' relational energy, hindering their ability to generate new ideas. Open communication and supportive environments are crucial for fostering innovation and mitigating the adverse effects of workplace abuse. TIL Creatives AI-generated image Workplace bullying and negative behaviour such as being excluded, humiliated or treated unfairly hinders creative thinking and reduces the likelihood of employees engaging in innovative side projects, a study by Indian Institute of Management (IIM), Lucknow has found. In many organisations, employees work on secret, self-initiated ideas developed without management's knowledge and present them to the management once they are ready to deliver significant results leading to business success, it said. According to officials, the researchers employed a mixed-method approach to gather the necessary data. In the experimental scenario-based part of the research, the team gathered input from 112 participants. In the survey-based part of the research, input from 313 employees working in IT-enabled companies was gathered."Our study sheds light on how subtle forms of workplace mistreatment can silently erode employees' creative potential. Organisations must create an environment where support, respect, and open dialogue are the norm to unlock true innovation," Rishab Chauhan, PhD scholar, IIM Lucknow, told PTI. The study found that workplace bullying reduces the likelihood of employees engaging in innovative side projects while negative workplace behaviour drains employees' "relational energy" which they gain from feeling supported or recognised Open communication between managers and employees can help preserve and revive creative thinking, it noted. The study has bagged the "Best Paper in Proceedings Award" in the conflict management division at the prestigious 85th Academy of Management (AOM) Conference, held at Copenhagen, Denmark. "It is an honour to have our work recognised at a global platform like AOM. We hope these findings encourage companies to not only curb workplace bullying but also actively nurture the creative spark in their employees," Payal Mehra, Professor, Communications, IIM Lucknow. The study highlights the critical need for organisations to actively identify and address negative workplace behaviour. It also highlights the need for strong communication and anti- bullying policies to encourage employee-driven innovation. "Organisations should establish a proper punitive system for detrimental workplace bullying at workplace. Firms can include employee behaviour as a significant metric for their performance assessment to mitigate workplace abuse. They should also offer secure avenues for employees to lodge appeals and enact proactive measures against workplace bullying," the study said.


Economic Times
19 hours ago
- Economic Times
Earthquake of magnitude 4.8 strikes Carlsberg Ridge
Synopsis A magnitude 4.8 earthquake struck the Carlsberg Ridge on August 17, 2025. The National Center for Seismology reported the quake's shallow depth of 10km. This increases the risk of aftershocks. The Carlsberg Ridge is a seismically active zone. It marks a boundary between tectonic plates in the Indian Ocean. A major earthquake of 7.6 magnitude was recorded there in 2003. TIL Creatives AI-generated image for representative purpose An earthquake of magnitude 4.8 occurred in the Carlsberg Ridge on Sunday, the National Center for Seismology (NCS) said in a statement. As per the NCS, the earthquake occurred at a shallow depth of 10km, making it susceptible to aftershocks. In a post on X, the NCS said, "EQ of M: 4.8, On: 17/08/2025 05:54:11 IST, Lat: 4.36 N, Long: 62.76 E, Depth: 10 Km, Location: Carlsberg Ridge." Shallow earthquakes are generally more dangerous than deep earthquakes. This is because the seismic waves from shallow earthquakes have a shorter distance to travel to the surface, resulting in stronger ground shaking and potentially more damage to structures and greater casualties. The Carlsberg Ridge is the northern section of the Central Indian Ridge, a divergent tectonic plate boundary between the African plate and the Indo-Australian plate, traversing the western regions of the Indian Ocean. The ridge, of which the Carlsberg Ridge is a part, extends northward from a triple point junction near the island of Rodrigues (the Rodrigues Triple Point) to a junction with the Owen fracture zone. The ridge started its northwards propagation in the late Maastrichtian and reached the incipient Arabian Sea in the Eocene. Then it continued to accrete basalt but did not propagate for nearly 30 Ma. Then, in the early Miocene, it started to propagate westwards towards the Afar hot spot, opening the Gulf of Aden. The Carlsberg Ridge is seismically active, with a major earthquake being recorded by the United States Geological Survey at 7.6 on the moment magnitude scale on July 15, July 15, 2003, M 7.6 earthquake on the Carlsberg Ridge occurred as a result of shallow transform faulting within a mid-ocean ridge system, located in the Arabian Sea between India and Northern Africa. The ridge marks the boundary between the India and Nubia (Africa) plates.