APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session X7: Quantitative Approaches to DNA Replication
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Room: Ballroom C3
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBP
Chair: John Bechhoefer, Simon Fraser University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.X7.2
Abstract: X7.00002 : Thermal Replication Trap
3:06 PM–3:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Dieter Braun
(Ludwig Maximilians University)
The hallmark of living matter is the replication of genetic
molecules and their active storage against diffusion. We have
argued in the past that thermal convection can host the
million-fold accumulation even of single nucleotides and at the
same time trigger exponential replication [1]. Accumulation is
driven by thermophoresis and convection in elongated
chambers, replication by the inherent temperature cycling in
convection. Optothermal pumping [2,3] allows to implement the
thermal trap efficiently in a toroidal [4] or linear [5]
geometry. Based on this method, we were in a position to combine
accumulation and replication of DNA in the same chamber [5]. As
we are missing a solid chemistry of prebiotic replication, we
used as a proxy reaction for to replication the polymerase chain
reaction.
Convective flow both drives the DNA replicating polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) while concurrent thermophoresis accumulates the
replicated 143 base pair DNA in bulk solution. The time constant
for accumulation is 92 s while DNA is doubled every 50 s. The
length of the amplified DNA is checked with thermophoresis.
Finite element simulations confirm the findings. The experiments
explore conditions in pores of hydrothermal rock which can serve
as a model environment for the origin of life and has prospects
towards the first autonomous evolution, hosting the Darwin
process by molecular selection using the thermophoretic trap. On
the other side, the implemented continuous evolution will be able
to breed well specified DNA or RNA molecules in the future.
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[1] Baaske, Weinert, Duhr, Lemke, Russell and Braun, PNAS 104,
9346 (2007)
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[2] Weinert, Kraus, Franosch and Braun, PRL 100, 164501 (2008)
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[3] Weinert and Braun, Journal of Applied Physics 104, 104701 (2008)
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[4] Weinert and Braun, Nano Letters 9, 4264 (2009)
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[5] Mast and Braun, PRL 104, 188102 (2010)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.X7.2