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Magnetic resonance control of spin-correlated radical pair dynamics in vivo

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Why This Matters

This groundbreaking research demonstrates the ability to control biomolecular reactions in living organisms using magnetic resonance, highlighting a new intersection of quantum physics and biology. It opens the door for innovative, non-invasive methods to influence gene expression and other cellular processes, with significant implications for medicine and biotechnology. The findings could lead to advanced therapies and diagnostic tools that leverage quantum effects in biological systems.

Key Takeaways

Magnetic fields can influence reactions involving spin-correlated radical pairs (SCRPs)1,2. This provides a mechanism by which both static and time-varying magnetic fields can affect living systems at the biomolecular level3. However, an engineered SCRP system conferring magnetic sensitivity to a non-native biochemical process in a multicellular organism has not yet been demonstrated. Here we demonstrate control of SCRP dynamics using magnetic resonance in a live transgenic animal. We show that the emission of various red fluorescent proteins (RFPs), in the presence of a flavin cofactor, can be modified by a combination of static and radiofrequency magnetic fields applied near the electron spin resonance frequency. This effect was measured at room temperature both in vitro and in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, genetically modified to express the RFP mScarlet4. These observations suggest that the magnetic field effects measured in RFP-flavin systems5 are due to quantum-correlated radical pairs with a coherence time larger than 4 ns. Our experiments demonstrate that radiofrequency magnetic fields can influence dynamics of reactions involving SCRPs in vivo, potentially enabling new methods for remotely controlling biomolecular processes, such as gene expression, and suggest broader potential for quantum tools in biology.