Entropy involved in fidelity of DNA replication
J. Ricardo Arias-Gonzalez

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the entropy involved in DNA replication using a statistical thermodynamics approach, providing a theoretical upper bound for replication fidelity based on information theory and equilibrium assumptions.
Contribution
It introduces a rigorous Shannon information framework for DNA replication and calculates entropy bounds in a no-dissipation, equilibrium context.
Findings
Derived an entropy measure for DNA copying process.
Identified two nucleotide incorporation mechanisms with biological implications.
Established an upper bound for replication fidelity based on entropy.
Abstract
Information has an entropic character which can be analyzed within the Statistical Theory in molecular systems. R. Landauer and C.H. Bennett showed that a logical copy can be carried out in the limit of no dissipation if the computation is performed sufficiently slowly. Structural and recent single-molecule assays have provided dynamic details of polymerase machinery with insight into information processing. We introduce a rigorous characterization of Shannon Information in biomolecular systems and apply it to DNA replication in the limit of no dissipation. Specifically, we devise an equilibrium pathway in DNA replication to determine the entropy generated in copying the information from a DNA template in the absence of friction. Both the initial state, the free nucleotides randomly distributed in certain concentrations, and the final state, a polymerized strand, are mesoscopic…
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