JMS/sandbox22
From Proteopedia
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| - | '''Birds | + | '''Birds, turtles, butterflies and other animals migrate''' with the help of the compasses built into their bodies. Little is known about the mechanistic nature of these compasses, and to fill the gap in knowledge, theoretical biophysicists Drs. Schulten and Solov'yov describe a nanomechanism within the birds' retina tissue, inside the rod cells, inside cryptochrome proteins known to process blue light for entraining circadian cycles, but now perhaps also deserving to be known as the seat of these organism's ability to sense magnetic fields. |
'''They hypothesize the birds perceive the effect of Earth's magnetic field by measuring the reaction dynamics of a process involving a pair of entangled electrons. When a bird''' first encounters blue light, the electrons separate in the many cryptochrome proteins, such that one free radical is found on a tryptophan amino acid, and the second free radical - originating from the same tryptophan - is found on a nearby FAD factor. When the blue light stimulation stops, the lone electron on FAD returns - in an irreversable reaction - to the tryptophan where it originated. The backtransfer, or return, of the lone electron to tryptophan, is partially a function of the angle the line between the two electrons makes relative to Earth's poles. The "''transition time''" from when the first cryptochrome returns to its unstimulated electron configuration until when all the cryptochrome protein's have returned, is one example of measurement of the reaction dynamics involving the back-transfer of the electron, and which is likely used by the bird to perceive its position relative to the earth's magnetic field.. | '''They hypothesize the birds perceive the effect of Earth's magnetic field by measuring the reaction dynamics of a process involving a pair of entangled electrons. When a bird''' first encounters blue light, the electrons separate in the many cryptochrome proteins, such that one free radical is found on a tryptophan amino acid, and the second free radical - originating from the same tryptophan - is found on a nearby FAD factor. When the blue light stimulation stops, the lone electron on FAD returns - in an irreversable reaction - to the tryptophan where it originated. The backtransfer, or return, of the lone electron to tryptophan, is partially a function of the angle the line between the two electrons makes relative to Earth's poles. The "''transition time''" from when the first cryptochrome returns to its unstimulated electron configuration until when all the cryptochrome protein's have returned, is one example of measurement of the reaction dynamics involving the back-transfer of the electron, and which is likely used by the bird to perceive its position relative to the earth's magnetic field.. | ||
Revision as of 00:06, 30 May 2014
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References:
- Cryptochrome and Magnetic Sensing, Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
