×
Stanford researchers use AI to create viruses that kill bacteria
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Scientists from Stanford University and the Arc Institute have successfully created and printed viruses with AI-designed DNA that can target and kill specific bacteria, marking the first time AI has generated functional genome-scale sequences. The breakthrough demonstrates AI’s potential for bioengineering applications while raising significant ethical concerns about the technology’s potential misuse for creating bioweapons.

How it works: Researchers used an AI model called Evo, specifically trained on millions of bacteriophage genomes, to design new virus sequences.
• The team chose phiX174, a well-studied virus that infects E. coli bacteria, as their starting point due to its simple structure of around 5,400 base pairs and 11 genes.
• Evo generated 302 different virus designs, which researchers then chemically assembled and tested against real E. coli strains.
• Of the 302 AI-designed viruses, 16 successfully infected their bacterial hosts, reproducing and killing the cells in the process.

Why this matters: This represents the first demonstration of AI creating entire functional genomes that work in real-world biological systems.
• “This is the first time AI systems are able to write coherent genome-scale sequences,” senior author Brian Hie, a Stanford computational biologist, told Nature. “The next step is AI-generated life.”
• The AI-designed viruses outperformed natural phiX174 in many cases, killing three different E. coli strains despite carrying major genome alterations that humans would be unlikely to design.

Key performance details: While 16 successes out of 302 attempts represents roughly a 5% success rate, experts consider this a remarkable achievement for AI-generated biological systems.
• According to Niko McCarty, a former bioengineer for Caltech and Imperial College London, “In many cases, they were more infectious than wildtype phiX174 despite carrying major genome alterations that a human would be unlikely to rationally design.”
• Some of the AI-written genomes are “so distinct from any known bacteriophage genome that they would technically be classified as their own species.”

Therapeutic potential: The research team sees significant promise for medical applications using AI-designed viruses to target harmful bacteria.
• “It was quite a surprising result that was really exciting for us because it shows that this method might potentially be very useful for therapeutics,” coauthor Samuel King told Nature.
• However, King cautioned that “a lot of experimental advances need to occur in order to design an entire living organism.”

Safety concerns: The breakthrough has sparked warnings from experts about potential dual-use risks and bioweapon applications.
• Craig Venter, founder of the J. Craig Venter Institute, urged extreme caution: “One area where I urge extreme caution is any viral enhancement research, especially when it’s random so you don’t know what you are getting.”
• “If someone did this with smallpox or anthrax, I would have grave concerns,” Venter told MIT Technology Review.
• The research could potentially be abused to create bioweapons or unintentionally produce dangerous, out-of-control viruses.

The big picture: While Venter noted that the AI approach is essentially “just a faster version of trial-and-error experiments,” the ability to generate functional genomes at scale represents a significant leap forward in synthetic biology capabilities.

Scientists Printed Viruses Designed by AI and They're Successfully Reproducing

Recent News

Meta expands Llama AI access to US allies in strategic move

Private tech companies increasingly serve as extensions of national security in the global AI race.

Google launches MCP Server to democratize AI data access

Simplifying AI's access to trusted public data without complex API integrations.

Andreessen Horowitz data shows ChatGPT dominates as consumers embrace AI tools

Consumers prefer versatile assistants over specialized tools, with surprising appetite for AI companions.