Deterministic Storage of Quantum Information in the Genetic Code
Roberto Rivelino

TL;DR
This paper proposes using DNA base pairs as units for a scalable quantum computer, demonstrating theoretically that proton transfer can enable quantum superpositions and entanglement for quantum information processing.
Contribution
It introduces a novel concept of DNA-based quantum computing using proton transfer in base pairs as quantum processing units, with a theoretical demonstration of superposition and entanglement.
Findings
Proton transfer in DNA base pairs can create superpositions of quantum states.
Nuclear spins involved in proton transfer can be deterministically prepared in superposition.
DNA structures can potentially encode quantum information if protected from decoherence.
Abstract
DNA has been proposed as a chemical platform for computing and data storage, paving the way for building DNA-based computers. Recently, DNA has been hypothesized as an ideal quantum computer with the base pairs working as Josephson junctions. There are still major challenges to be overcome in these directions, but they do not prevent deviceful perspectives of the main problem. The present paper explores DNA base pairs as elementary units for a scalable nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computer (NMRQC). First, it presents an overview of the proton transfer (PT) mechanism during the prototropic tautomerism in the base pairs, scoring the current stage. Second, as a proof-of-principle, the paper examines these molecular structures as quantum processing units (QPUs) of a biochemical quantum device. For the model proposed here, it is theoretically demonstrated that the nuclear spins…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms · Fractal and DNA sequence analysis · Gene Regulatory Network Analysis
