Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-xtgtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T06:32:41.688Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Quantum Electrodynamics Calculation of Long - Range Interaction of Biopolymers in Intracellular Dispersion Medium

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 February 2011

A. O. Pinchuk
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Theoreical Radiophysics, Radiophysics Fuculty, Kyiv T.Shevchenko University, Kyiv, Ukraine, 252017, onmf@serv.biph.kiev.ua
V. I. Vysotskii
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics and Theoreical Radiophysics, Radiophysics Fuculty, Kyiv T.Shevchenko University, Kyiv, Ukraine, 252017, onmf@serv.biph.kiev.ua
Get access

Abstract

The general Lifshitz theory of van der Waals interaction was used to formulate and compute energies between the nucleotides situated on the opposite ends of a broken DNA helix. Our calculation show that infrared and ultraviolet resonances in the dielectric functions of DNA and the intracellular liquid account for less then 10 percent of the forces of interaction, at a range of 5-15 angstroms, between nucleotides. Thus the fundamental contribution to the interaction is presented by the group of resonances with frequencies of X - ray range. It was shown that during the interaction between thymine - guanine, adenine - guanine and cytosine - guanine there exists a potential barrier which prevents DNA selfrepairing after a mutanous, over a distance of about 7 - 20 angstroms, at the room temperature and with reference to the viscosity factor for pure water. All the remaining pairs of nucleotides have no such barrier. In addition the barrier vanishes and DNA undergoes complete selfrepairing with the decreace in viscosity of intracellular medium.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Vysotskii, V.I., Komilova, A.A., Samoylenko, I.I., On the synergism and antagonism in the dynamics of inactivation and autorepairing of DNA, Moscow,1996, pp.2545.Google Scholar
2. Dzyaloshinskii, I.E., Lifshitz, E.M., Pitaevskii, L.P., Usp.Phys.Nauk 23,405 (1961).Google Scholar
3. Barash, Yu. S., Van der Waals forces, (Nauka Publishers, Moskow,1988), pp.73126.Google Scholar
4. Yukhnevich, G.V., Infra -Red Spectroscopy of Water, (Nauka Publishers, Moskow, 1973), p. 97.Google Scholar
5. Debye, P., Polar molecules, (Ney York, 1929).Google Scholar
6. Setlow, R.B., Molecular Biophysics, (London, 1962), pp. 186.Google Scholar
7. Volkenshtein, M.N., Molecular Biophysics, (Mir Publishers,Moskow, 1975), p. 156.Google Scholar