快猫短视频

Life

Mirror life: 快猫短视频s clash over threat of lab-engineered bacteria

Bacteria created using mirror images of natural biomolecules would pose a grave threat to life on Earth, some researchers warn, but a new study suggests they would struggle to survive in the wild

By James Woodford

29 May 2026

Microbes engineered in the lab could use mirror images of molecules found in nature

THOM LEACH/Science Photo Library / Alamy

Microbes based on mirror images of molecules in the natural world would have a hard time surviving outside the laboratory, according to a modelling study. To do so, they would need a ready supply of 鈥渕irror food鈥, or some novel way to feed themselves.

But the research has drawn a backlash from other experts in the field who warn that it may underestimate the grave risks posed by so-called mirror life.

Many biological molecules, such as DNA and proteins, are chiral, which means they can exist in either left-handed or right-handed forms. Like your left and right hands, they are mirror images of each other, and cannot be superimposed. But all life on Earth uses right-handed DNA molecules and left-handed protein molecules, which enables cellular machinery to fit together properly.

While it is not yet technically feasible, one day it may be possible to manufacture organisms in which the handedness, or chirality, of molecules is reversed. In 2024, 38 scientists published calling for work towards the creation of mirror life to be halted because of the dangers such organisms may pose 鈥 for example, immune systems may not be able to recognise and defend against mirror bacteria.

In the new study, at the Santa Fe Institute, New Mexico, and his colleagues explored what would happen if a tiny population of mirror organisms appeared in Earth鈥檚 biosphere. They used computer models to determine what constraints would be placed on mirror life forms in a range of different real-world scenarios.

Free newsletter

Sign up to The Daily

The latest on what鈥檚 new in science and why it matters each day.

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

For mirror life to pose a threat, it must first be able to exist in some kind of self-sustaining way, says Sol茅. The biggest hurdle mirror organisms would need to overcome is that life forms can only digest food made up of molecules with the same chirality as themselves.

鈥淥ne could imagine engineering dedicated 鈥榤irror food鈥 together with mirror organisms. But that shifts the problem rather than solving it,鈥 says Sol茅. 鈥淎 mirror biosphere would require not just isolated nutrients, but a continuous industrial infrastructure capable of producing large quantities of mirror-chiral biomolecules: mirror sugars, mirror amino acids, mirror lipids, and so on.鈥

The team鈥檚 models specifically addressed whether mirror organisms could establish themselves autonomously in real ecological environments, not whether they could temporarily survive under controlled laboratory or industrial conditions with engineered feeding systems.

鈥淥ur view is that mirror life would likely face very severe barriers under a broad range of ecological conditions, making successful establishment difficult,鈥 Sol茅 says. 鈥淗owever, there are still important open questions that require further analysis, including long-term evolutionary dynamics and more realistic models of how immune systems might interact with mirror organisms.鈥

The study has been published on a preprint server before being peer-reviewed. But a group of scientists who study mirror life have already responded with a statement calling for the paper to be revised.

at the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, one of the authors of the statement, told 快猫短视频 that although mirror microbes would initially grow more slowly than native microbes because of a nutritional mismatch, there are plenty of nutrients that are not chiral which could support their growth. 鈥淔urther, the mirror cell population would rapidly evolve and adapt to new conditions, creating essentially a second tree of life,鈥 says Cooper.

The study also suggests that existing biodiversity on Earth would act as a 鈥渇irewall鈥 against invasion, since natural organisms are better adapted to the environment and would outcompete the mirror organisms. In the case of mirror bacteria, immune systems may still recognise them as foreign bodies, Sol茅 and his colleagues argue.

But Cooper is not convinced. 鈥淭here are countless examples of invasion biology that indicate the vulnerability of biodiverse ecosystems to invaders lacking predators,鈥 he says.

at the University of Minnesota, one of the authors of the 2024 Science paper, says Sol茅鈥檚 team is correct that the supply of food containing the same chiral molecules would be a constraining factor for mirror organisms. 鈥淭his is the inherent disadvantage mirror life would face in any natural environment,鈥 she says.

But she points out that there are ways such organisms could make their own food using photosynthesis. They could also be engineered to make use of chiral molecules that are found in nature. 鈥淚t would be extremely hard to make such an organism, but it’s not impossible to imagine,鈥 says Adamala. 鈥淚’m not clear on the reasoning behind labelling widespread establishment as 鈥榟ighly unlikely鈥 then.鈥

Sol茅 says his team did consider the possibility of mirror organisms exploiting non-chiral nutrients or using photosynthesis, but argues they would still face the same ecological challenges.

鈥淭he key question is not whether some nutrients are accessible, but whether access is sufficient to sustain long-term positive growth in competition with the existing biosphere,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ven if mirror organisms could survive on a limited set of achiral compounds, they would still face severe ecological constraints, including low resource quality, dilution, competition and the inability to efficiently process the vast majority of naturally available chiral biomolecules.鈥

at King’s College London says mirror life is a plausible future concern, but it should not draw attention from pressing, near-term biological risks. “The right response is not panic and not dismissal. It is careful upstream governance, clear red lines around risky work and a proportionate research agenda that does not crowd out more immediate biosafety and biosecurity priorities,” she says.

“The fact that this paper argues for ecological constraints does not remove the need for governance. If anything, it shows why governance should be evidence-based and adaptive: we need to understand which assumptions drive the risk, where the uncertainties are, and what kinds of work would materially change the picture,” says Lentzos.

Reference:

Biorxiv

How synthetic genomes can tidy up evolution鈥檚 mess

In this talk, synthetic biologist Tom Ellis explores the rapidly advancing science of synthetic genomics, where researchers are now building entire chromosomes from chemicals, and rewriting the DNA of bacteria and yeast – and perhaps soon plants and even people.

Topics:

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Receive a weekly dose of discovery in your inbox. We'll also keep you up to date with 快猫短视频 events and special offers.

Sign up
Piano Exit Overlay Banner Mobile Piano Exit Overlay Banner Desktop