Microbiomimesis: Bacteria, Our Cognitive Collaborators

Critical Inquiry 47 (4):777-787 (2021)
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Abstract

With roots in Greek drama, mimesis has recently undergone expansion into an unexpected domain: microbial resistance to viruses. Research revealed that bacteria copy portions of the DNA of attacking viruses and incorporate them into their own DNA. When a virus attacks again, the bacteria generate matching RNA sequences that, together with the Cas9 protein, enable them to recognize the virus and cut its DNA. This process satisfies the requisites for mimesis, thus justifying the name microbiomimesis. It exemplifies nonconscious cognition, a capacity that all lifeforms possess to process and interpret information in contexts that connect it with meaning. In 2012 Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Carpentier coauthored a paper showing that the bacterial defense of RNA/cas9 can be programmed to work as a gene editing tool. So was born CRISPR-Cas9, a technology now routinely used to edit genes by detecting their precise location and modifying them. Never has mimesis been so controversial and laden with implications for the futures of human and nonhuman lifeforms on the planet; what lessons can its traditions offer?

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