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‘Mirror life’: This synthetic form could end humanity, scientists warn

Scientists have called for a halt on ‘mirror life’ microbe research, believing it to pose ‘unprecedented risk’ to life on earth.

Published on: Aug 29, 2025 08:50 AM IST
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Technology to create ‘mirror life’ does not exist yet, and it may be quite some time before humankind cracks it, but the potential destruction it could bring is so enormous, that scientists are already calling for a ban before it is too late.

For life forms on earth, the DNA double-helix is right-handed. Image for representation. (Pixabay)
For life forms on earth, the DNA double-helix is right-handed. Image for representation. (Pixabay)

John Glass, synthetic biologist, who helped make the first living cell with a synthetic genome, wrote in Financial Times some days back “We should choose not to build mirror life and pass laws to ensure nobody can. The question is not whether we are able to prevent this threat — it is whether we will act while we still can.”

What is ‘mirror life’ and why is it dangerous?

‘Mirror life’ involves synthetic organisms that have DNA structures mirroring those in known organisms. For life forms on earth, the DNA double-helix is right-handed, which means that its strands – which is a sugar-phosphate backbone – twist to the right. For proteins, the building blocks of cells, these strands are left-handed.

These concerns were echoed in June this year, again. Glass also noted that the Alfred P Sloan Foundation, an influential non-profit that funds scientific research, has unequivocally said that they will not be supporting efforts to create mirror organisms.

Most scientists are of the opinion that the technology to create mirror life is at least a decade away, if not three. However, the risks are so high that it warrants early warnings. “Once it is possible to build a mirror cell, it would be comparatively easy to engineer many more kinds of mirror bacteria — the simplest form of mirror life,” Glass wrote, adding, “If this is achieved and Pandora's box opens it could pose extraordinary risks.”

He explained that immune systems, to the best of our knowledge, produce very weak antibody response against ‘mirror molecules’, if any. “Having even one immune deficiency can cause a patient to die of overwhelming bacterial infections; a mirror bacterial infection might be like having many immune deficiencies at once,” Glass wrote.

Mirror bacteria could also resist predation by organisms which normally keep bacteria in check. This could let them run rampantly unchecked through entire ecosystems. “Contaminated areas could become irreversibly uninhabitable, compromising our agriculture and natural world. Huge numbers of people, animals and plants could be wiped out, with some driven to extinction,” Glass said.

Does ‘mirror life’ technology have any benefits?

Despite its destructive potential, mirror life technology comes with its set of advantages when it comes to the field of medicine. Emerging forms of mirror proteins can be used to make more effective drugs that survive in the body longer. Glass noted that a balance needed to be struck between what kind of research could continue, and what needs to be shut down.

“This will require precision about what research can continue and what should cease,” Glass observed, adding, “we have realized these dangers well before the point of no return.”

Where does ‘mirror life’ research stand in US and the world?

The US Congress noted that limited federal funding had gone into ‘mirror life’ R&D. In 2019, the US National Science Foundation gave two grants linked to mirror life seeking "to design, construct, and safely deploy synthetic mirror cells in which all of the key molecules—nucleic acids, proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids—exist in chiral states opposite to their natural forms."

These were given to the University of California, San Diego, and Yale University and totaled almost $ 4 million. Congress further noted “European Union and People's Republic of China have also expressed interest in mirror life research but CRS was unable to verify funding totals.”

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shuvrajit Das Biswas

Shuvrajit has over seven years of experience covering US, India, and world news. An English Literature postgraduate from Jadavpur University, Shuvrajit started off covering entertainment, gaming and all things pop culture. There were brief periods away from the media industry, with short stints in content marketing, ed-tech and academic editing. However, the newsroom beckoned and over the last few jobs, Shuvrajit has exceedingly focused on team functioning as well, including tracking news and assigning tasks, working on everyday breaking news, framing detailed coverage plans, and creating immersive and data-driven stories. In his time as a digital journalist, he has covered a Lok Sabha election, multiple state elections, Union Budgets and award ceremonies. He has also helped in planning content for company event panels in the past. For work, Shuvrajit enjoys dabbling with data visualization, editing tools, and AI chatbots and attempts to incorporate AI workflows in everyday tasks. He is deeply interested in geopolitics, sports, films and music. Prompting is a new fascination for Shuvrajit now. Apart from that, he can be found doom-scrolling, sharing memes, or cheering on his favorite football team.

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