 |
|
Revealing what could be considered a telepathic sense, double helixes of DNA can recognize matching molecules from a distance and then gather together, all seemingly without help from any other molecules, scientists find.(File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
|
BEIJING, Jan. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- Revealing what could
be considered a telepathic sense, double helixes of DNA can recognize matching
molecules from a distance and then gather together, all seemingly without help
from any other molecules, scientists find.
Previously, under the classic understanding of DNA,
scientists had no reason to suppose double helixes of the molecule could sort
themselves by type, let alone seek each other out.
The spiraling structure of DNA includes strings of
molecules called bases. Each of its four bases, commonly known by the letters A,
T, C and G, is chemically attracted to a specific partner ¡ª A likes binding to
T, and C to G. The scheme binds paired strands of DNA into the double helix the
molecule is famous for.
Scientists investigated double-stranded DNA tagged
with fluorescent compounds. These molecules were placed in saltwater that
contained no proteins or other material that could interfere with the experiment
or help the DNA molecules communicate. Curiously, DNA with identical sequences
of bases were roughly twice as likely to gather together as DNA molecules with
different sequences.
The known interactions that draw the bases together
are not the factor bringing these double helixes close. Double helixes of DNA
keep their bases on their insides. On their outsides, they have highly
electrically charged chains of sugars and phosphates, which obscure the forces
that pull bases together.
To understand what researchers conjecture is really
happening, think of double helixes of DNA as corkscrews. The bases that make up
a strand of DNA each cause the corkscrew to bend one way or the other.
Double-stranded DNA with identical sequences each result in corkscrews "whose
ridges and grooves match up," said researcher Sergey Leikin, a physical
biochemist at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in
Bethesda, Maryland.
The electrically charged chains of sugars and
phosphates of double helixes of DNA cause the molecules to repel each other.
However, identical DNA double helixes have matching curves, meaning they repel
each other the least, Leikin explained.
The scientists conjecture such "telepathy" might help
DNA molecules line up properly before they get shuffled around. This could help
avoid errors in how DNA combines, errors that underpin cancer, aging and other
health problems. Also, the proper shuffling of DNA is essential to sexual
reproduction, as it helps ensure genetic diversity among offspring, Leikin
added.
(Agencies)