Bioenergetics, genetic coding, and catalysis are all difficult to imagine emerging without pre-existing historical context. That context is often posed as a "Chicken and Egg" problem; its resolution is concisely described by de Grasse Tyson: "The egg was laid by a bird that was not a chicken". The concision and generality of that answer furnish no details-only an appropriate framework from which to examine detailed paradigms that might illuminate paradoxes underlying these three life-defining biomolecular processes. We examine experimental aspects here of five examples that all conform to the same paradigm. In each example, a paradox is resolved by coupling "if, and only if" conditions for reciprocal transitions between levels, such that the consequent of the first test is the antecedent for the second. Each condition thus restricts fluxes through, or "gates" the other. Reciprocally-coupled gating, in which two gated processes constrain one another, is self-referential, hence maps onto the formal structure of "strange loops". That mapping uncovers two different kinds of forces that may help unite the axioms underlying three phenomena that distinguish biology from chemistry. As a physical analog for Gödel's logic, biomolecular strange-loops provide a natural metaphor around which to organize a large body of experimental data, linking biology to information, free energy, and the second law of thermodynamics.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom11020265 | DOI Listing |
Life (Basel)
January 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7260, USA.
How Nature discovered genetic coding is a largely ignored question, yet the answer is key to explaining the transition from biochemical building blocks to life. Other, related puzzles also fall inside the aegis enclosing the codes themselves. The peptide bond is unstable with respect to hydrolysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
January 2024
Department of Neuroscience, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611.
The brain is composed of complex networks of interacting neurons that express considerable heterogeneity in their physiology and spiking characteristics. How does this neural heterogeneity influence macroscopic neural dynamics, and how might it contribute to neural computation? In this work, we use a mean-field model to investigate computation in heterogeneous neural networks, by studying how the heterogeneity of cell spiking thresholds affects three key computational functions of a neural population: the gating, encoding, and decoding of neural signals. Our results suggest that heterogeneity serves different computational functions in different cell types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
February 2021
Department of Physics and Te Ao Marama Centre for Fundamental Inquiry, University of Auckland, PB 92019, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.
Bioenergetics, genetic coding, and catalysis are all difficult to imagine emerging without pre-existing historical context. That context is often posed as a "Chicken and Egg" problem; its resolution is concisely described by de Grasse Tyson: "The egg was laid by a bird that was not a chicken". The concision and generality of that answer furnish no details-only an appropriate framework from which to examine detailed paradigms that might illuminate paradoxes underlying these three life-defining biomolecular processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins
May 2020
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Conversion of the free energy of NTP hydrolysis efficiently into mechanical work and/or information by transducing enzymes sustains living systems far from equilibrium, and so has been of interest for many decades. Detailed molecular mechanisms, however, remain puzzling and incomplete. We previously reported that catalysis of tryptophan activation by tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase, TrpRS, requires relative domain motion to re-position the catalytic Mg ion, noting the analogy between that conditional hydrolysis of ATP and the escapement mechanism of a mechanical clock.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvert Neurosci
June 2012
Department of Physiology, Belarusian State University, Nezhaleznasty Av. 4, 220030 Minsk, The Republic of Belarus.
The pair of giant reciprocally coupled neurons VD1 and RPaD2 within the CNS of the freshwater pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis was used to analyse the effect of hydrogen peroxide on gap-junction connection. Electrical activity of VD1/RPaD2 was recorded with intracellular microelectrodes in order to analyse gap-junction signalling. Hydrogen peroxide application (1 × 10⁻⁴ M) results in a rapid, 1.
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