Pac-Man-shaped blobs become world’s first self-replicating biological robots

As Pac-man-shaped xenobot “parents” move around their environment, they collect loose stem cells in their “mouths” that, over time, aggregate to create “offspring” xenobots that develop to look just like their creators. (Image credit: Doug Blackiston and Sam Kriegman)

Tiny groups of cells shaped like Pac-Man are the world’s first self-replicating biological robots. 

The tiny bots are made from the skin cells of frogs, but they don’t reproduce by mitosis or meiosis or any of the other ways cells divide and replicate in normal circumstances. Instead, they build more of themselves from raw materials — free-floating frog skin cells — creating multiple generations of nearly identical organisms. 

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