Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

DNA-Level Encryption Developed by Researchers to Protect the Secrets of Bioengineered Cells

read original get DNA Data Storage Kit → more articles
Why This Matters

Researchers have developed DNA-level encryption for bioengineered cells, creating a genetic security system that prevents unauthorized access and theft of valuable biological materials. This innovation could significantly enhance the security of bioengineering assets, which are poised to become a multi-trillion-dollar industry, by making it extremely difficult for malicious actors to steal or misuse engineered cells. As biosecurity concerns grow alongside the industry’s expansion, such encryption methods are crucial for protecting intellectual property and ensuring safe innovation in biotech.

Key Takeaways

The biotech industry's engineered cells could become an $8 trillion market by 2035, notes Phys.org. But how do you keep them from being stolen? Their article notes "an uptick in the theft and smuggling of high-value biological materials, including specially engineered cells."

In Science Advances, a team of U.S. researchers present a new approach to genetically securing precious biological material. They created a genetic combination lock in which the locking or encryption process scrambled the DNA of a cell so that its important instructions were non-functional and couldn't be easily read or used. The unlocking, or decryption, process involves adding a series of chemicals in a precise order over time — like entering a password — to activate recombinases, which then unscramble the DNA to their original, functional form...

They created a biological keypad with nine distinct chemicals, each acting as a one-digit input. By using the same chemicals in pairs to form two-digit inputs, where two chemicals must be present simultaneously to activate a sensor, they expanded the keypad to 45 possible chemical inputs without introducing any new chemicals. They also added safety penalties — if someone tampers with the system, toxins are released — making it extremely unlikely for an unauthorized person to access the cells.

"The researchers conducted an ethical hacking exercise on the test lock and found that random guessing yielded a 0.2% success rate, remarkably close to the theoretical target of 0.1%."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.