JMS/sandbox22

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Researchers Klaus Schulten at University Illinois at Urbana Champaign and Ilya Solov'yov, now at the University of Southern Denmark, connect this system to the fascinating ability of many birds, and other flying species, to migrate while sensing the earth's magnetic field. Through simulations, they show that where the bird's cryptochrome compass's <scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/23'>"FAD-trp324 needle"</scene> (shown as a dotted line) is aligned with the line extending between the earth's poles, the entangled electrons will 'on average' spend more time spinning in the same direction, and therefore by delaying the electrons return to trp324, FAD will 'on average' be in its signalling mode for longer.
Researchers Klaus Schulten at University Illinois at Urbana Champaign and Ilya Solov'yov, now at the University of Southern Denmark, connect this system to the fascinating ability of many birds, and other flying species, to migrate while sensing the earth's magnetic field. Through simulations, they show that where the bird's cryptochrome compass's <scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/23'>"FAD-trp324 needle"</scene> (shown as a dotted line) is aligned with the line extending between the earth's poles, the entangled electrons will 'on average' spend more time spinning in the same direction, and therefore by delaying the electrons return to trp324, FAD will 'on average' be in its signalling mode for longer.
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Therefore, as a possible explanation, because many cryptochrome proteins are involved in registering blue light photons - millions of proteins per cell, and many cells across the retina, a change in the average time spent in the signalling state - "the transition rate" - is perhaps measured by the brain as the time until 50% of the cells do not have active FAD molecules. By moving its head about in different directions, a bird can find position at which the signalling last longest. That places the bird along the world's north-south pole axis.
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<!--
this is similar to what is known for <scene name='58/585079/Diamond/3'>nitrogen vacancy centers</scene>.
this is similar to what is known for <scene name='58/585079/Diamond/3'>nitrogen vacancy centers</scene>.
showing the <scene name='58/585079/Diamond/4'>molecular symmetry</scene>.
showing the <scene name='58/585079/Diamond/4'>molecular symmetry</scene>.
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-->
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<!--
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/30'>cornell</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/30'>cornell</scene>
also see march 2017 molecule of the month by david goodsell.
also see march 2017 molecule of the month by david goodsell.
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<!-- Mechanistically, the propensity of the electrons to spin in one direction or the other is affected by a local magnetic field, which is in this case primarily determined by the nuclear spins of several <scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/22'>key nitrogen and hydrogen atoms</scene> (naming, as in fig. 5 of Schulten et al., 2007), the current spin state of the entangled electrons, '''and the external magnetic field (emanating from earth)'''. Only when the line between FAD and trp324 is parallel to the line connecting the north and south poles, is the earth's (external) magnetic field biasing the electrons spins to the same direction (parallel;triplet) spinning. Otherwise, the nuclear spins are the main determinants, and the the spins are approximately equivalently likely to be in the same or opposite directions. -->
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Mechanistically, the propensity of the electrons to spin in one direction or the other is affected by a local magnetic field, which is in this case primarily determined by the nuclear spins of several <scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/22'>key nitrogen and hydrogen atoms</scene> (naming, as in fig. 5 of Schulten et al., 2007), the current spin state of the entangled electrons, '''and the external magnetic field (emanating from earth)'''. Only when the line between FAD and trp324 is parallel to the line connecting the north and south poles, is the earth's (external) magnetic field biasing the electrons spins to the same direction (parallel;triplet) spinning. Otherwise, the nuclear spins are the main determinants, and the the spins are approximately equivalently likely to be in the same or opposite directions.
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Therefore, as a possible explanation, because many cryptochrome proteins are involved in registering blue light photons - millions of proteins per cell, and many cells across the retina, a change in the average time spent in the signalling state - "the transition rate" - is perhaps measured by the brain as the time until 50% of the cells do not have active FAD molecules. By moving its head about in different directions, a bird can find position at which the signalling last longest. That places the bird along the world's north-south pole axis.
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-->
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<!-- (But how a bird know whether it is facing due north or south is a question which cannot be figured out using this protein compass, the research emphasize in their study). -->
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</StructureSection>
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<!--
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(But how a bird know whether it is facing due north or south is a question which cannot be figured out using this protein compass, the research emphasize in their study).
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/26'>showing asp390 (or 387 in cry2) that is critical for photoreception - no homo or heteroassociation</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/26'>showing asp390 (or 387 in cry2) that is critical for photoreception - no homo or heteroassociation</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/27'>showing the substitution of tucker which results in cry2oligo</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/27'>showing the substitution of tucker which results in cry2oligo</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/28'>BLUE 374 weak as full, weaker, but still constitute as phr. DARK 387 is never bound.</scene>
<scene name='58/585079/1u3d_magnet/28'>BLUE 374 weak as full, weaker, but still constitute as phr. DARK 387 is never bound.</scene>
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-->
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</StructureSection>
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=References:=
=References:=
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
* [http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/cryptochrome/ Cryptochrome and Magnetic Sensing], ''Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group'' at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
* [http://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/cryptochrome/ Cryptochrome and Magnetic Sensing], ''Theoretical and Computational Biophysics Group'' at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Current revision

cryptochrome (PDB entry 1u3d)

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References:

  1. Solov'yov IA, Chandler DE, Schulten K. Magnetic field effects in Arabidopsis thaliana cryptochrome-1. Biophys J. 2007 Apr 15;92(8):2711-26. Epub 2007 Jan 26. PMID:17259272 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.106.097139

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Joseph M. Steinberger

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