BBC Science Focus

QUANTUM WEIRDNESS COULD BE THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND DNA MUTATIONS

Potentiall­y harmful changes in genetic code may be caused by subatomic particles ‘tunnelling’ across the DNA helix

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Genetic mutations could be caused by quantum effects, researcher­s from Surrey University have found. Mutations are changes in the DNA of an organism that can result from errors made during cell division, viral infections or exposure to radiation and carcinogen­s. They are essential to evolution as they can lead to adaptation­s that allow certain organisms to outcompete others in their environmen­t, but they can also lead to disease.

Mutations can be thought of as ‘spelling mistakes’ in the genetic code. DNA is made up of four nucleotide bases – A, C, T and

G – that under normal conditions always bond together in specific ways: A always bonds to T, for example. These bonds form the ‘rungs’ of the ladder that makes up DNA’s iconic double-helix structure.

However, if the nature of these bonds becomes altered in some way, then the normal pairing rules break down, leading to incorrect bases becoming attached to one another and possibly giving rise to a mutation.

Now, the Surrey team has found that this mismatched bonding may be caused by a mysterious phenomenon known as quantum tunnelling. Tunnelling occurs when particles move through a barrier that, according to classical physics, they shouldn’t be able to cross. The barrier may be a physically impassable medium, such as an insulator, or a region of high energy that the particle isn’t energetic enough to overcome.

In the case of genetic mutations, researcher­s found that protons, subatomic particles involved in the bonding of DNA, are continuous­ly tunnelling back and forth across the energy barrier found between the two sides of the helix.

If they do this in the moments before the helix splits along its centre during the first stage of the DNA copying process, some of the protons can get caught on the wrong side. This can lead to an error in copying and, potentiall­y, a mutation.

“Biologists would typically expect tunnelling to play a significan­t role only at low temperatur­es and in relatively simple systems,” said the study’s co-author Dr Marco Sacchi. “Therefore, they tended to discount quantum effects in DNA. With our study, we believe we have proved that these assumption­s do not hold.”

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