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[Science-2011]其实,DNA懂量子力学

已有 4573 次阅读 2012-6-10 10:44 |个人分类:量子生物学|系统分类:科普集锦| DNA, 量子生物学

    尽管量子物理的种种状况通常只有在极度微观且接近绝对零度的环境下才能观测到——超出了一定的体积和温度范围,量子态就会坍缩,回复到经典物理的范畴——日前,一项由以色列与德国研究所共同进行的研究却发现,体积远远超出微观层面且通常在常温下运作的DNA,竟然有着分辨基本粒子的量子自旋状态的能力。

    这项研究的论文发表在今年的《科学》杂志上。据化学教授Ron Naaman介绍,DNA辨识自旋的方式是通过其双螺旋结构中的手性。之前科学家们曾经观测到过一些手性分子能与两种不同的自旋状态产生不同的反应,但从未有过系统的研究。

    在这次的研究中,他们在一块金制培养基上安置了一层可以自组成的DNA,然后让其与分别处于+1/2自旋和-1/2自旋的电子们碰触,观察有无不同反应,结果令人吃惊——DNA与一类电子会有激烈的反应,而对另一组电子则几乎毫无反应,并且这种对于电子自旋的选择性是随着DNA的长度、规模和完整性增加而更加明显的:DNA的单链和破损片段对于两组电子就没有这种选择性。换言之,这一属性取决于DNA的手性。

    这一发现对于此后的科研存在的重要的意义:一来,既然完整、长段的DNA是优良的自旋“过滤器”,那么今后用于研究和观察基本粒子自旋状态的仪器和设备就可以不靠电荷与磁场而是靠DNA来完成;二来,既然完整的DNA只会受到一种自旋状态的电子的影响,那么,今后的医疗和研究器材也可以从这方面入手,轻易地控制对DNA的作用。


New research shows that a biological molecule -- DNA -- can discern between quantum states known as spin. (Credit: © Rodolfo Clix / Fotolia)

DNA Can Discern Between Two Quantum States, Research Shows

ScienceDaily (June 4, 2011) — Do the principles of quantum mechanics apply to biological systems? Until now, says Prof. Ron Naaman of the Institute's Chemical Physics Department (Faculty of Chemistry), both biologists and physicists have considered quantum systems and biological molecules to be like apples and oranges. But research he conducted together with scientists in Germany, which appeared recently in Science, shows that a biological molecule -- DNA -- can discern between quantum states known as spin.

Quantum phenomena, it is generally agreed, take place in extremely tiny systems -- single atoms, for instance, or very small molecules. To investigate them, scientists must usually cool their material down to temperatures approaching absolute zero. Once such a system exceeds a certain size or temperature, its quantum properties collapse, and "every day" classical physics takes over. Naaman: "Biological molecules are quite large, and they work at temperatures that are much warmer than the temperatures at which most quantum physics experiments are conducted. One would expect that the quantum phenomenon of spin, which exists in two opposing states, would be scrambled in these molecules -- and thus irrelevant to their function."

But biological molecules have another property: they are chiral. In other words, they exist in either "left-" or "right-handed" forms that can't be superimposed on one another. Double-stranded DNA molecules are doubly chiral -- both in the arrangement of the individual strands and in the direction of the helices' twist. Naaman knew from previous studies that some chiral molecules can interact in different ways with the two different spins. Together with Prof. Zeev Vager of the Particle Physics and Astrophysics Department, research student Tal Markus, and Prof. Helmut Zacharias and his research team at the University of Münster, Germany, he set out to discover whether DNA might show some spin-selective properties.

The researchers fabricated self-assembling, single layers of DNA attached to a gold substrate. They then exposed the DNA to mixed groups of electrons with both directions of spin. Indeed, the team's results surpassed expectations: The biological molecules reacted strongly with the electrons carrying one of those spins, and hardly at all with the others. The longer the molecule, the more efficient it was at choosing electrons with the desired spin, while single strands and damaged bits of DNA did not exhibit this property. These findings imply that the ability to pick and choose electrons with a particular spin stems from the chiral nature of the DNA molecule, which somehow "sets the preference" for the spin of electrons moving through it.

In fact, says Naaman, DNA turns out to be a superb "spin filter," and the team's findings could have relevance for both biomedical research and the field of spintronics. If further studies, for instance, bear out the finding that DNA only sustains damage from spins pointing in one direction, then exposure might be reduced and medical devices designed accordingly. On the other hand, DNA and other biological molecules could become a central feature of new types of spintronic devices, which will work on particle spin rather than electric charge, as they do today.

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The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by Weizmann Institute of Science.

Journal Reference:

  1. B. Gohler, V. Hamelbeck, T. Z. Markus, M. Kettner, G. F. Hanne, Z. Vager, R. Naaman, H. Zacharias. Spin Selectivity in Electron Transmission Through Self-Assembled Monolayers of Double-Stranded DNA.Science, 2011; 331 (6019): 894 DOI:10.1126/science.1199339


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上一篇:[转载]【Nature-2008】一切皆量子——叠加与退相干
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