New DNA HDD can be ‘erased and overwritten repeatedly’ — University of Missouri researchers aiming for next-gen thumb-drive-sized storage

Paper files, photographs, magazines and digital media twist together to form an RNA strand, representing how tomorrow’s data — from family photos to entire archives — could be stored in DNA.
(Image credit: Abbie Lankitus, University of Missouri)

We’ve written about DNA storage and its potential several times before. However, the University of Missouri (Mizzou) is developing a “DNA hard drive,” which “moves the field closer to a practical, rewritable system.” That’s good, as readers prefer practical solutions to pie-in-the-sky projects, and rewritables are particularly attractive. Unfortunately, Mizzou’s blog post on its DNA hard drive advance is pretty light on technical details, and doesn’t share any prototype photos, demo statistics, or availability timescales, for example.

“DNA is incredible — it stores life’s blueprint in a tiny, stable package,” Li-Qun ‘Andrew’ Gu, a professor of chemical and biomedical engineering at Mizzou’s College of Engineering, gushes. “We wanted to see if we could store and rewrite information at the molecular level faster, simpler, and more efficiently than ever before.”

Gu’s team claims to have developed a method to store, erase, and overwrite DNA data repeatedly. Indeed, this would make the Mizzou DNA HDD attractive and practical – with its “extraordinary storage density and longevity,” due to the nature of DNA.

Frameshift encoding and Nanopore sensing

Mizzou doesn’t divulge details of the writing methodology in its blog post, but we unearthed the associated research paper, which says it uses "frameshift encoding" to write data. This technique is an emerging approach among several groups looking at rewritable DNA storage.

The Mizzou blog briefly explains its DNA reading method, though. The team has designed “a compact electronic device paired with a molecular-scale detector called a nanopore sensor,” it is explained. This read head, since we are using HDD terminology, senses the subtle electrical changes as DNA passes through its field, and electronics/software converts the DNA’s A, C, G, and T sequences into binary.

The academics assert that their project, which leverages the university’s experts in fields such as physics, biology, data, and materials sciences, marks a “key milestone in making DNA a long-term replacement for some of today’s energy-hungry storage technologies.” That’s pretty bold for a project that admittedly has a “long-term” hope to shrink its DNA HDD to USB thumb-drive size. Moreover, we haven’t even seen the non-miniaturized prototypes or demos yet. We’ll stay tuned, but think it will be a while before we see any DNA-data thumb drives on Amazon

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Mark Tyson
News Editor