Petri dish photography
In his lab at MIT, biological engineer Christopher Voigt
has modified bacteria in agar to act like the light-sensitive silver
halide crystals in gelatin emulsion on photographic film. He has hacked a
harmless strain of Escherichia coli so that it produces black pigment
when left in darkness or remains transparent when exposed to red light.
He and his team modified the E. coli by adding 2 proteins from
blue-green algae that recognize the red light and turn off the gene that
makes the black color. The image is obtained by shining the red light
through a printed transparency taped to the bottom of the petri dish.
The process takes a few days, but the photo will last up to 3 years in a
refrigerator.
Image and text found in
Quigley's Cabinet.
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