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Quantum
Biology: Powerful Computer Models Reveal Key Biological Mechanism
01/16/07
Intein
crystal prior to protein splicing Image
Credit: Rensselaer/Phil Shemella
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Troy, N.Y. — Using
powerful computers to model the intricate dance of atoms and
molecules, researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have
revealed the mechanism behind an important biological reaction.
In collaboration with scientists from the Wadsworth Center of the
New York State Department of Health, the team is working to
harness the reaction to develop a “nanoswitch” for a
variety of applications, from targeted drug delivery to genomics
and proteomics to sensors.
The research is part of a
burgeoning discipline called “quantum biology,” which
taps the skyrocketing power of today’s high-performance
computers to precisely model complex biological processes. The
secret is quantum mechanics — the much-touted theory from
physics that explains the inherent “weirdness” of the
atomic realm.
Reporting in the February 2007
issue of Biophysical
Journal, the
researchers describe a mechanism to explain how an intein —
a type of protein found in single-celled organisms and bacteria —
cuts itself out of the host protein and reconnects the two
remaining strands. The intein breaks a protein sequence at two
points: first the N-terminal, and then the C-terminal. This
aspect of the project, which is led by Saroj Nayak, associate
professor of physics, applied physics, and astronomy at
Rensselaer, focuses on the C-terminal reaction.
Another Rensselaer team
previously found that the reaction at the C-terminal speeds up in
acidic environments. But to control the reaction and use it as a
nanoswitch, a better understanding of the mechanism behind this
reaction is needed, according to Philip Shemella, a doctoral
student in physics at Rensselaer and corresponding author of the
current paper.
“You can use this protein
that cuts itself and joins the pieces together in a predictable
way,” he said. “It already has a function that would
be nice to harness for nanotechnology purposes.” And
because the reaction may be sensitive to light and other
environmental stimuli, the process could become more than just a
two-way switch between “on” and “off.”
The researchers revealed the
details of the reaction mechanism by applying the principles of
quantum mechanics — a mathematical framework that describes
the seemingly strange behavior of the smallest known particles.
For example, quantum mechanics predicts that an electron can be
in two different places at the same time; or that an imaginary
cat can be simultaneously dead and alive, as suggested by one
famous thought experiment.
Until recently, scientists
could not apply quantum mechanics to biological systems because
of the large numbers of atoms involved. But the latest generation
of supercomputers, along with the development of efficient
mathematical tools to solve quantum mechanical equations, is
making these calculations possible, according to Shemella.
“Typically, quantum
mechanics has been applied to solid-state problems because the
symmetry makes the calculation smaller and easier, but there’s
really nothing different physically between a carbon atom in a
protein and a carbon atom in a nanotube,” he said. “Even
though a protein is such an asymmetric, complex system, when you
really zoom into the quantum mechanical level, they are just
atoms. It doesn’t matter if strange things are happening;
it’s still just carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen.”
Quantum mechanics allows
researchers to do things that can’t be done with classical
physics, such as modeling the way chemical bonds break and form,
or including the effect of proton “tunneling” —
allowing protons to move through energy barriers that normal
logic would deem impossible.
For this project, the
researchers used computing facilities at Rensselaer’s
Scientific Computation Research Center (SCOREC) and the National
Center for Supercomputing Applications at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In the future, they hope to take
advantage of Rensselaer’s new Computational Center for
Nanotechnology Innovations — a $100 million partnership
between Rensselaer, IBM, and New York state to create one of the
world’s most powerful university-based supercomputing
centers.
The additional computing power
will allow them to model complex biological systems with even
greater accuracy: “The more atoms you include, the more
accurate your system,” Shemella said.
The paper’s other authors
from Rensselaer were Georges Belfort, principal investigator for
the project and the Russell Sage Professor of Chemical
Engineering; Shekhar Garde, the Elaine and Jack S. Parker Career
Development Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering;
Brian Pereira, a graduate student in chemical engineering; and
Yiming Zhang, a graduate student in physics. Patrick Van Roey, a
research scientist at the Wadsworth Center, also contributed to
the project.
The research was funded by a
grant from the National Science Foundation to Georges Belfort at
Rensselaer, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health to
Marlene Belfort at the Wadsworth Center.
Source
/ Credit: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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