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Synthetic Cell Breakthrough: SpudCell Shows How Lab‑Made Life Could Power a New Bio‑Manufacturing Era
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Synthetic Cell Breakthrough: SpudCell Shows How Lab‑Made Life Could Power a New Bio‑Manufacturing Era

Photography & Words by Chloe Winters July 7, 2026 3 MIN READ
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Scientists at the University of Minnesota have announced a synthetic cell that can ingest nutrients, expand and split in a petri dish, a feat that brings the prospect of fully engineered bio‑factories into sharper focus.

SpudCell: a synthetic cell that mimics life

The pre‑print posted on bioRxiv describes how researchers combined 36 purified enzymes, a lipid membrane and a stripped‑down genome—about 1/50 the size of a typical bacterium—to create a system they call SpudCell. The name, a nod to the potato‑shaped vesicles, also echoes the historic Sputnik launch, hinting at the ambition behind the work.

“I do not consider SpudCell alive,” co‑author Kate Adamala told Reuters. “It is a chassis for producing the chemicals we need.”

Why the breakthrough matters

Unlike the 2016 minimal cell effort from the J. Craig Venter Institute, which trimmed genes from a living bacterium, this project builds from the ground up. The ability to grow and divide without a native chromosome marks a first for bottom‑up synthetic biology.

Current limitations are stark: the cell cannot generate its own ATP, relies on externally supplied fats and sugars, and its genome floats on plasmids rather than a tidy chromosome, leading to uneven DNA segregation during division.

Industry analysts at Bloomberg caution that scaling such systems will require robust energy self‑sufficiency and reliable DNA partitioning.

Critics such as biophysicist Cees Dekker argue that media hype precedes peer review, warning that “if the findings survive scrutiny, the attention is earned; if not, it is premature.”

From lab curiosity to industrial platform

Adamala envisions SpudCell as a blank slate for manufacturing. By sidestepping natural cellular defenses that block the synthesis of toxic or novel compounds, a fully engineered synthetic cell could churn out pharmaceuticals, specialty polymers or even climate‑friendly fertilizers, potentially cutting petrochemical reliance by ↑ 10% over the next two decades.

The concept of “dry‑ship” bio‑labs—cells that can be lyophilized, transported without refrigeration and reactivated on demand—could transform supply chains for vaccines and rare therapeutics, especially in low‑resource settings.

Funding remains a hurdle. Adamala’s nonprofit Biotic aims to funnel philanthropic capital directly into the research, a model that blurs the line between academic discovery and startup venture.

For now, SpudCell is a proof‑of‑concept. As peer review proceeds, the scientific community will gauge whether this synthetic cell can evolve from a laboratory oddity into a cornerstone of a greener, bio‑driven economy.


Dispatch from: Chloe Winters

Venture Capital & Innovation Reporter

Global Gallery Dispatches

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