Jellyfish Genes Eyed for Optical Storage
Kathleen G. Tatterson
SAN DIEGO -- For the next generation of optical storage technology, scientists at the University of California are looking to the sea.
A report published in
Nature describes newly discovered properties of the green fluorescent protein that gives jellyfish their eerie glow, and explains how those properties could someday be exploited to store and access computer memories in packages the size of a single molecule.
Although researchers just discovered the unique switching properties of mutated molecules of the protein procured from the
Aequorea victoria jellyfish, they envision a day when computers will use the genes to store optical data, similar to the way bits are stored in values of 1 and 0 now, only in a much smaller space.
"This is radically different, since current technology is in no way biologically based," said W.E. Moerner, professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the university. "A single molecule is much smaller than [data storage in] current technology. It could mean creating an extremely small storage element."
Green fluorescent proteins are traditionally used as biological markers. Molecular biologists link the mutated genes to proteins in living cells and tissues in order to track those genes. According to the
Nature report, this latest discovery represents the first example of a room-temperature optical switch of a mutated jellyfish protein in which each molecule is individually addressable, nondestructively performing readout by way of fluorescence.
While studying artificially mutated jellyfish proteins in the single-molecule state, scientist Robert M. Dickson noticed that an emissive molecule excited by a green argon-ion laser at 448 nm emitted a bright yellow color, then blinked to a dark state, not the expected bleached state in which it could no longer absorb light. The team then determined that when the dark molecule absorbed a 405-nm blue light beam from a mercury lamp, it would return to its original emissive state.
Team researchers Roger Y. Tsien and Andrew B. Cubitt developed a way to engineer the jellyfish protein to harness the yellow glow for optical storage devices and other potential applications.
But for now, the use of mutated jellyfish protein for optical data storage is little more than an intriguing idea. Further engineering to remove the blinking and improve the ability to irradiate one molecule at a time are some of the hurdles scientists face.
LATEST NEWS
- Fraunhofer CAP Appoints Head, Scientific Director: People in the News: 1/15/25
Jan 15, 2025
- Bioluminescent Tags Track RNA Dynamics in Live Cells in Real Time
Jan 15, 2025
- Sensing and Inspection Specialist EVK Joins Headwall Group
Jan 14, 2025
- PHOTON IP Raises $4.9M Seed Round
Jan 14, 2025
- Graphene Prevents Damage to Flexible Thin Films for Wearable Electronics
Jan 14, 2025
- Thorlabs Acquires VCSEL Developer, Longtime Partner Praevium Research
Jan 13, 2025
- Electrically-Pumped GaAs-Based Nano-Ridge Lasers Fabricated at Wafer Scale
Jan 13, 2025
- Photoactivated Gel Achieves Bone Regeneration and Adhesion at Same Time
Jan 13, 2025