Electrodynamic forces driving DNA-protein interactions at large distances
E.Faraji, P.Kurian, R.Franzosi, S.Mancini, E.Floriani, V.Calandrini,, G.Pettini, M.Pettini

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electrodynamic forces can facilitate selective DNA-protein interactions over large distances, using a quantum model inspired by biomolecular electron transport, supported by numerical simulations of enzyme-DNA systems.
Contribution
It introduces a second-quantized dynamical model for DNA-protein interactions and demonstrates sequence-dependent charge transfer phenomena relevant to biochemical processes.
Findings
Resonance peaks indicate sequence-specific charge transfer.
Randomized sequences lead to broad, noisy spectra.
Electrodynamic interactions may influence biological activity.
Abstract
In the present paper we address the general problem of selective electrodynamic interactions between DNA and protein, which is motivated by decades of theoretical study and our very recent experimental findings (M. Lechelon et al, \textit{Sci Adv} \textbf{8,} eabl5855 (2022)). Inspired by the Davydov and Holstein-Fr\"{o}hlich models describing electron motion along biomolecules, and using a model Hamiltonian written in second quantization, the time-dependent variational principle (TDVP) is used to derive the dynamical equations of the system. We demonstrate the efficacy of this {second-quantized} model for a well-documented biochemical system consisting of a restriction enzyme, \textit{Eco}RI, which binds selectively to a palindromic six-base-pair target within a DNA oligonucleotide sequence to catalyze a DNA double-strand cleavage. The time-domain Fourier spectra of the electron…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic and Electromagnetic Effects · Biofield Effects and Biophysics
