Quantum Information Flow in Microtubule Tryptophan Networks
Lea Gassab, Onur Pusuluk, Travis J.A. Craddock

TL;DR
This paper models quantum information flow in microtubule tryptophan networks using a Lindblad master equation, revealing how initial states, structure, and disorder influence correlation dynamics and information transfer.
Contribution
It extends existing models by incorporating explicit geometries and dipole orientations, providing a detailed Lindbladian framework for quantum information flow in microtubules.
Findings
Superradiant components facilitate rapid correlation export.
Subradiant components retain correlations and slow leakage.
Structural disorder suppresses long-range transport.
Abstract
Networks of aromatic amino acid residues within microtubules, particularly those formed by tryptophan, may serve as pathways for optical information flow. Ultraviolet excitation dynamics in these networks are typically modeled with effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonians. By extending this approach to a Lindblad master equation that incorporates explicit site geometries and dipole orientations, we track how correlations are generated, routed, and dissipated, while capturing both energy dissipation and information propagation among coupled chromophores. We compare localized injections, fully delocalized preparations, and eigenmode-based initial states. To quantify the emerging quantum-informational structure, we evaluate the norm of coherence, the correlated coherence, and the logarithmic negativity within and between selected chromophore sub-networks. The results reveal a strong…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics · Advanced Fluorescence Microscopy Techniques · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
