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Electronic Transport in DNA the disorder perspective

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Title: Electronic Transport in DNA the disorder perspective


1
Electronic Transport in DNA the disorder
perspective
Quantum physics on biological nanostructures a
first attempt
Rudolf A Roemer Daphne Klotsa, Matthew
Turner Department of Physics and Centre for
Scientific Computing


2
Why nanostructures?
NanoStructures Laboratory, Princeton University
  • New nanotechnologies will fabricate structures
    substantially smaller, better, and cheaper than
    current technology permits.
  • Innovative nanoscale electronic, optoelectronic,
    and magnetic devices by combining cutting-edge
    nanotechnology with frontier knowledge from
    different disciplines.

3
Semiconductor nanostructuresQ-dots, -well, SETs
4
Why DNA?
A. Turberfield, PhysicsWorld 16, March 2003, 43-46
  • DNA is a wonderful material with which to
    build. It can act as
  • Molecular glue
  • Fuel for molecular engines
  • Parallel computer
  • Self-assembled nanostructures
  • E. Winfree , Nature 394, 539-544, Aug. 6, 1998
  • scaffold in protein-crystallography
  • Rigid tiles or girders J.H. Reif et al., (2003)

and many more
5
Why disorder?
  • well-developed theory
  • good computational algorithms
  • DNA is in solution
  • -gt there is disorder

Y2 of electron wave function in 1113 system
6
Combining DNA electronics
  • Conductor
  • Fink/Schoenenberger, Nature 398, 407 (1999)

Semiconductor Porath et al., Nature 403, 635 -
638 (10 Feb 2000)
Insulator Priyadarshy et al., J. Phys. Chem.,
100, 17678 (1996)
5 5
7
7
Do enzymes scan DNA using electric pulses?
"DNA-mediated charge transport for DNA repair"
E.M. Boon, A.L. Livingston, N.H. Chmiel, S.S.
David, and J.K. Barton, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci.
100, 12543-12547 (2003).

Healthy DNA
electron
MutY
MutY
Broken DNA
MutY
MutY
8
DNA (Deoxyribonucleicacid)
  • Linear bio-polymer, backbone of repeated
    sugar-phosphate units, attached with bases
  • G uanine
  • C ytosine
  • A denine
  • T hymine
  • double helix structure
  • AT, GC, not AC, AG, TC, TG

complementary
9
DNA basics
ATCGATCGATGATGTCGA TAGCTAGCTACTACAGCT
  • AT, GC pairs via attractive hybridization
  • diameter 2nm, pitch 3.4 nm, base-pair separation
    0.34 nm, 3bn base-pairs/sequence
  • 15 base-pairs stable at room T
  • 3 base-pairs form a codon, unit of information,
    so 4364 words for 20 aminoacids and additional
    operations (stop/start).
  • Samples with, say, AGCTAGTA code can be ordered
    with at least 1 accuracy
  • Commercial suppliers ship within a few days

10
Huge amounts of genetic data
  • H. sapiens 30,000 genes 3 ? 109 bp
  • C. elegans 10,000 genes 108 bp
  • E. coli 4,380 genes 4,639,221 bp
  • SARS virus 14 genes 29,761 bp
  • Paradox 105 proteins in H. sapiens
  • ??One gene codes for more than one protein

11
Biological function of DNA
  • Replication
  • Template for RNA coding for proteins polymerase
    of DNA -gt RNA -gt proteins (actin, cell rigidity)
  • Self-assembly

12
Is DNA a quantum wire?
  • Absence of dc-Conductivity in l-DNA
  • De Pablo et al, PRL 86, 4992 (2000)
  • Poly-GC strands have one-band of overlapping
    p-orbitals
  • l-DNA overlap drops quickly
  • 13 base-pairs, DFT calculation

LUMO/PolyGC
HOMO/PolyGC
LUMO/ l-DNA
13
The fishbone model
Cuniberti et al., PRB 65, 24131(R) (2002)
  • tight-binding model with a gap
  • Poly-GC GCGCGCGC
  • explains experiments in Poly-GC

Experiments vs. theory
14
The fishbone model
  • Hopping amplitudes are 1 along chain and 2 onto
    backbone
  • Onsite energies are zero, but could be used to
    model the ionization energies

15
Semiconducting gap in Poly-GC
  • Transfer-matrix method
  • Large DNA sequences possible
  • Localization lengths l give possible extend of
    electron transfer -gt measurable via fluorescence
    experiments

Energy band
Energy band
16
l-DNA
LOCUS NC_001416 48502 bp DNA linear PHG
08-JUL-2002 DEFINITION Bacteriophage lambda,
complete genome.
  • Small differences between l-DNA and l(R)-DNA
  • Computation for complete DNA strand

17
Influence of backbone disorder
Klotsa, RAR, Turner, submitted (2004)
  • Backbone (BB) disorder used to model
    environment/solution into which DNA is immersed
  • BB disorder leads to a rescaling of the
    semi-conducting gap
  • This might explain diversity of experimental
    observations

18
Random adhesion of Na-Atoms at backbone
DNA is in solution, so there is disorder
Na
New states
Na
Na
19
The ladder model
  • Q-chemical calculations do not find HOMO/LUMO on
    both bases of a base pair
  • Hopping amplitudes between chains is 1/2

20
Na binary disorder at the BB
More disorder gives less localization! Contradict
ion to folklore!
less localized
highly localized
21
Telomeric DNA with Na-BB disorder
TTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGDNA
  • Differences in biologically different DNA
    sequences

less localized
highly localized
22
The equivalent 1D chain
  • Exact equivalence to 1D chain with modified
    onsite potential
  • Physics of 1D localization is applicable
  • Klotsa, RAR, Turner, submitted to Proceedings of
    ICPS27, (2004)

23
Centromeric DNA
813138 base pairs
  • chromosome 2 of yeast
  • meaningful DNA sequence
  • highly repetitive according to biology

24
Coding vs. non-coding regions
  • Biologically there is a huge difference
  • What about in transport?

25
Outlook
Kelley et al., Science 283, 375 (1999) ..
Paradigms must now be developed to describe these
properties of the DNA p-stack, which can range
from insulator- to wire-like.
  • Can electronic transport measurement be used to
    access biological function?
  • Investigate sub-sequences of DNA with well-known
    biological functions
  • Investigate trigger sequences. Is process
    transport specific?
  • Relate to fluorescence experiments

26
Music from l-DNA
  • Music from DNA
  • The Shamen, S2 Translation - An instrumental
    piece of music based on the DNA code for the S2
  • S2 receptor protein for 5-hydroxy tryptamine
    (Serotonin) and others. One of the most important
    molecules in the mediation of both ordinary and
    non-ordinary (or "Shamanic") states of
    consciousness, which is why the molecule was
    chosen for this piece.

Serotonin
27
Conclusions
  • The electronic properties of DNA are an important
    challenge for both experiment and theory.
  • Applications are manifold if linking of
    biological with electronic function can be made.
  • Present research offers a route into DNA physics
    via the pathway of disordered systems.

28
Disordered Quantum Systems
  • DNA D. Klotsa, M. Turner
  • Localization M. Ndawana, J. Stephany, A. Croy,
    H. Schulz-Baldes (Berlin)
  • Nano-rings J. He, M. Raikh (Utah)
  • Quantum Hall C. Sohrmann, B. Muzykantskii, P.
    Cain (Chemnitz)
  • Bio-diffusion D. Skirvin (HRI Warwick)
  • Numerical methods C. Sohrmann, O. Schenk (Basel)
  • Funding EPSRC, Warwick, DFG

29
A MIT due to disorder-induced quantum
interference
  • Adding disorder to a quantum model of
    non-interacting electrons gives a transition

disorder
metal
insulator
multifractal
30
Challenges at the MIT
  • Is there universality?
  • Ndawana, RAR, Schreiber, EPJB 27, 399-407
    (2002)
  • What about correlations in the disorder?
  • Ndawana, RAR, Schreiber, accepted in EPL (2004)
  • What about many-body interactions?
  • Schuster, RAR, Schreiber, Phys. Rev. B 65,
    115114-7 (2002)
  • What about other transport quantities such as
    thermoelectric power?
  • RAR, MacKinnon, Villagonzalo, J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
    72 Suppl. A, 167-168 (2003)

31
The Anderson model as a challenge to modern
eigenvalue methods
  • Indefinite matrix problematic for iterative
    solvers, convergence accelerators,
    preconditioners
  • Improving

Colloboration with numerical mathematicians
(Basel) PARDISO is faster for large matrices
32
The excitonic AB effect for nano-rings
R. A. Römer and M. E. Raikh, Phys. Rev. B 62,
7045-7049 (2000)
  • Nano-sized
  • rings with
  • radius of
  • 30-50nm exist

A. Lorke et al., Microelectronic Engineering 47,
95 (1999).
Excitons are being generated via
photoluminescence. What about Aharonov-Bohm
effect for this nano-geometry and neutral
(quasi-)particle?
33
Challenges
  • Trions and other charged excitons
  • R. A. Römer, M. E. Raikh, phys. stat. sol. (b)
    227, 381-385 (2001)
  • Experimental verification
  • thus far only for trions
  • Bayer, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 186801
    (2003)
  • AB effect in an electric field
  • a current project

V
x
34
l(R)-DNA
10000 base-pairs, random ATCG-DNA sequence
  • Hopping strengths according to DNA content
  • AT-AT -gt 1t
  • GC-GC -gt 1t
  • DNA-BB -gt 2t
  • AT-GC -gt ½ t
  • Physics of a random hopping chain
  • LOCALIZATION!

35
l(R)-DNA
10000 base-pairs, random ATCG-DNA sequence
  • Hopping strengths according to DNA content
  • AT-AT -gt 1t
  • GC-GC -gt 1t
  • DNA-BB -gt 2t
  • AT-GC -gt 1/10 t

36
Why DNA?
A. Turberfield, PhysicsWorld 16, March 2003, 43-46
  • DNA is a wonderful material with which to
    build. It can act as
  • Molecular glue
  • Fuel for molecular engines
  • Parallel computer
  • Self-assembled nanostructures
  • E. Winfree , Nature 394, 539-544, Aug. 6, 1998
  • scaffold in protein-crystallography
  • Rigid tiles or girders J.H. Reif et al., (2003)

and many more
37
Telomeric DNA with 6000 base pairs
TTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGDNA
  • Buffer sequences at beginning or end of
    meaningful DNA gene sequences

38
Telomeric DNA with BB disorder
  • Large localization lengths even in presence of
    disorder

39
Outlook 2
  • What about a two-rung model?

(Quantum chemistry calculations)
  • Results qualitatively similar, but

40
Transport in and Physics with DNA
A. Turberfield, PhysicsWorld 16, March 2003, 43-46
  • Molecular glue
  • Fuel for molecular engines
  • Parallel computer
  • Self-assembled nanostructures
  • E. Winfree , Nature 394, 539-544, Aug. 6, 1998
  • scaffold in protein-crystallography
  • Rigid tiles or girders J.H. Reif et al., (2003)

41
Energy-Dependence for ladder model
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