AI-Designed Viral Genome

24 Sep 2025

AI-Designed Viral Genome

Researchers at Stanford University and the Arc Institute have successfully created the world’s first functioning virus genome designed entirely by artificial intelligence (AI).

  • This marks a new milestone in biotechnology, moving from reading DNA (sequencing) and writing it (synthesis) to now designing it.

Significance of the Breakthrough

  • Previous AI applications in biology were limited to designing individual proteins or small multi-gene systems.
  • Creating a complete viral genome is far more complex, requiring orchestration of multiple interacting genes and regulatory elements to ensure replication, host specificity, and evolutionary fitness.

The Methodology

  • Test Case Virus: The researchers selected a tiny virus named bacteriophage ΦX174, which infects E. coli bacteria. 
    • This virus was also the first genome ever to be fully sequenced (1977) and the first synthesized from scratch (2003).
  • AI Model: A genomic language model named ‘Evo’ was used. 
    • It was fine-tuned on thousands of genomes from the virus’s family, enabling it to understand and generate new genomes in the specific “dialect” of ΦX174.
  • Generation: Using prompts, the AI generated thousands of candidate genomes. 
  • Screening: The team then used custom software to perform quality checks, ensuring each design had the essential genes and proteins required to infect E. coli.
  • Synthesis and Testing: Hundreds of the AI-designed genomes were synthesized in the lab and inserted into bacteria. 
    • This process resulted in the emergence of 16 new, functional viruses from 302 attempts.

About Genome

  • A genome is the complete set of an organism’s DNA, including all of its genes and non-coding sequences, that carries the instructions for growth, development, and functioning.

About Bacteriophage

  • It is a type of virus that infects bacteria. 
  • All bacteriophages are composed of a nucleic acid molecule that is surrounded by a protein structure.
  • A bacteriophage attaches itself to a susceptible bacterium and infects the host cell. 
  • Following infection, the bacteriophage hijacks the bacterium’s cellular machinery to prevent it from producing bacterial components and instead forces the cell to produce viral components.
  • Eventually, new bacteriophages assemble and burst out of the bacterium in a process called lysis. 
  • Bacteriophages occasionally remove a portion of their host cells’ bacterial DNA during the infection process and then transfer this DNA into the genome of new host cells. This process is known as transduction.

AI-Designed Viral Genome

Explore UPSC Foundation Course

Need help preparing for UPSC or State PSCs?

Connect with our experts to get free counselling & start preparing

Aiming for UPSC?

Download Our App

      
Quick Revise Now !
AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD SOON
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध
Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

<div class="new-fform">







    </div>

    Subscribe our Newsletter
    Sign up now for our exclusive newsletter and be the first to know about our latest Initiatives, Quality Content, and much more.
    *Promise! We won't spam you.
    Yes! I want to Subscribe.