One of the hallmarks of living things is self-replication, the ability  to make new copies of biological structures. Scientists have harnessed  this ability in several ways, using DNA and viruses to organize  materials for things like solar panels.  But inducing artificial self-replication, which would enable new types  of self-fabricating materials, has proven more difficult. Now  researchers at New York University say they’ve taken a step in that  direction, building a complex artificial system that can self-replicate.The researchers started with artificial DNA tile motifs, which are tiny  arrangements of DNA. Just like the base pairs of DNA, the tiles each  serve as a letter, each of which pairs with another specific letter.  DNA’s A-T and G-C pairs form the molecule’s double helix. In this case,  the tiles were made of artificial bent triple-helix molecules, each  containing three DNA double helices. The researchers wanted to use this  motif to seed the creation of a new structure, which would be based on  the rules established by the seed.
To do this, they created a sequence of seven tiles, or seven “words,” to  serve as the seed, and placed the molecules in a solution. There it  matched up with complementary tiles, and assembled into a daughter  array. Then the molecules were heated up, separating the daughter tiles  from the seed. The process started again, with the daughter array  matching with new complementary tiles and assembling a granddaughter  array — and so on.
The second-generation tiles reproduced the same sequence as the seed  word, without any enzymes or other biological triggers, according to the  NYU team. 
 It’s worth noting that the seed word was pretty much arbitrary — so  the work shows that self-replicating materials can be created from any  seed composition, said Paul Chaikin, an NYU physics professor and one of  the study's co-authors, said in a university news release.
This is a long way from being used in materials fabrication, of course, but the work shows it is possible.
 “Our findings raise the tantalizing prospect that we may one day be  able to realize self-replicating materials with various patterns or  useful functions,” the researchers write.
by"environment clean generations"
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