Submitted by filosoful t3_10fk0by in Futurology
Comments
[deleted] t1_j4xlv46 wrote
How do you clear the traps then
AwesomeDragon97 t1_j4xnfez wrote
You need to get larger traps to catch the smaller ones.
5050Clown t1_j4yrmqp wrote
It's an entirely unexplored method of arriving at a post apocalyptic wasteland where the majority of humans are reanimated corpses trying to infect the last living humans . This time it's DNA origami.
DrN0Face t1_j50fhfq wrote
D-gami Beta would like to know your location.
We can be friends.
We are all happy here.
Lets make a better world. . . Together.
Endward22 t1_j56rv4q wrote
I feel so stupid that I never think in that way.
​
But this is just a "firewall" against DNA-Viruses, right?
FuturologyBot t1_j4xend5 wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/filosoful:
By engineering structures out of DNA, scientists could potentially prevent larger viruses, like coronaviruses and influenza viruses, from interacting with cells
Using a technique called “DNA origami,” researchers created traps that encase large viruses—such as SARS-CoV-2, influenza A, and Zika—in hopes of preventing them from infecting cells.
A study published today (18 January) in Cell Reports Physical Science details how researchers used DNA origami to engineer strands of genetic material into Lego-like structures that form a cage around large pathogens.
While the study only looked at how effectively the structures bound to viruses in vitro, the traps could one day help clear viruses from the body.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/10fk0by/origami_dna_traps_could_keep_large_viruses_from/j4x94wk/
[deleted] t1_j50f6vm wrote
[removed]
filosoful OP t1_j4x94wk wrote
By engineering structures out of DNA, scientists could potentially prevent larger viruses, like coronaviruses and influenza viruses, from interacting with cells
Using a technique called “DNA origami,” researchers created traps that encase large viruses—such as SARS-CoV-2, influenza A, and Zika—in hopes of preventing them from infecting cells.
A study published today (18 January) in Cell Reports Physical Science details how researchers used DNA origami to engineer strands of genetic material into Lego-like structures that form a cage around large pathogens.
While the study only looked at how effectively the structures bound to viruses in vitro, the traps could one day help clear viruses from the body.