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A bird flies by a group of birds perched on a wall in Hollywood, California March 10, 2009.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
WASHINGTON, June 22 (Xinhua) -- Researchers at the
University of Illinois report that a toxic molecule known to damage cells and
cause disease may also play a pivotal role in bird migration. The molecule,
superoxide, is proposed as a key player in the mysterious process that allows
birds to "see" Earth's magnetic field.
The discovery, reported this month in Biophysical
Journal, occurred as a result of a "mistake" made by a collaborator, said
principal investigator Klaus Schulten, a professor of physics at University of
Illinois. His postdoctoral collaborator, Ilia Solov'yov, of the Frankfurt
Institute for Advanced Studies, did not know that superoxide was toxic, seeing
it instead as an ideal reaction partner in a biochemical process involving the
protein cryptochrome in a bird's eye.
Cryptochrome is a blue-light photoreceptor found in
plants and in the eyes of birds and other animals. Schulten was the first to
propose (in 2000) that this protein was a key component of birds' geomagnetic
sense, a proposal that was later corroborated by experimental evidence. He made
this prediction after he and his colleagues discovered that magnetic fields can
influence chemical reactions if the reactions occur quickly enough to be
governed by pure quantum mechanics.
"Prior to our work, it was thought that this was
impossible because magnetic fields interact so weakly with molecules," he said.
Such chemical reactions involve electron transfers,
Schulten said, "which result in freely tumbling spins of electrons. These spins
behave like an axial compass."
Changes in the electromagnetic field, such as those
experienced by a bird changing direction in flight, appear to alter this
biochemical compass in the eye, allowing the bird to see how its direction
corresponds to north or south.
"Other researchers had found that cryptochrome,
acting through its own molecular spins, recruits a reaction partner that
operatesat so-called zero spin. They suggested that molecular oxygen is that
partner," Schulten said. "We propose that the reaction partner is not the benign
oxygen molecule that we all breathe, but its close cousin, superoxide, a
negatively charged oxygen molecule."
When Solov'yov showed that superoxide would work well
as a reaction partner, Schulten was at first dismissive.
"But then I realized that the toxicity of superoxide
was actually crucial to its role," he said. The body has many mechanisms for
reducing concentrations of superoxide to prevent its damaging effects, Schulten
said. But this gives an advantage, since the molecule must be present at low
concentrations -- but not too low -- "to make the biochemical compass work
effectively," he said.
Although known primarily as an agent of aging and
cellular damage, superoxide recently has been recognized for its role in
cellular signaling.
However, its toxicity may also explain why humans,
who also have cryptochrome in their eyes, do not have the same ability to see
Earth's electromagnetic field, Schulten said.
"Our bodies try to play it safe," he said. "It might
be that human evolution chose longevity over orientational
ability."