Context:
• Scientists have developed protein-based quantum sensors capable of detecting magnetic fields and radio waves inside living cells, opening new possibilities for biological research and medical diagnostics.
Key Highlights:
Scientific Breakthrough
• Researchers modified enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP) to detect magnetic resonance signals inside cells.
• Scientists also engineered MagLOV proteins, derived from plant light-sensing proteins, capable of functioning as quantum sensors.
Quantum Sensing Mechanism
• The sensing process involves radical pairs, where electrons interact with nearby molecules.
• These interactions are sensitive to weak magnetic fields, altering the protein’s fluorescence emission.
• Scientists use laser-based techniques to manipulate the protein’s spin state to detect signals.
Advantages of Protein-Based Sensors
• Genetically encoded sensors allow cells to produce these proteins naturally.
• They can be targeted to specific cellular locations.
• MagLOV proteins demonstrate magnetic resonance at room temperature in living bacterial cells.
Technological Applications
• Enable nanoscale measurement of magnetic fields, electric fields, temperature, and chemical conditions inside cells.
• Improve fluorescence imaging techniques by separating sensor signals from background noise.
• Potential applications in:
• Neuroscience research
• Medical diagnostics
• Cellular biology studies.
Relevant Prelims Points:
• Quantum Sensors: Devices that use quantum mechanical properties such as spin states or superposition to measure physical quantities with extremely high precision.
• Fluorescent Proteins:
• Proteins that emit light when exposed to specific wavelengths.
• Widely used in biological imaging and molecular tracking.
• Radical Pair Mechanism:
• Two molecules with unpaired electrons whose behavior is sensitive to magnetic fields.
• MagLOV Proteins:
• Engineered proteins derived from plant light-sensitive proteins (LOV domains) used for magnetic sensing inside living cells.
Relevant Mains Points:
Significance for Science and Medicine
• Allows real-time monitoring of cellular processes at nanoscale levels.
• Could revolutionize biomedical research and diagnostics.
• Helps scientists study magnetic and electromagnetic interactions in biological systems.
Scientific Implications
• Challenges earlier assumptions that quantum effects cannot operate in warm biological environments.
• Opens new interdisciplinary fields such as quantum biology.
Way Forward
• Expand research on biocompatible quantum sensing technologies.
• Integrate quantum sensors with advanced imaging and medical technologies.
• Address ethical and biosafety considerations in genetic engineering.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS Paper 3: Science & Technology – Emerging Technologies, Biotechnology.
• Prelims: Quantum sensors, fluorescent proteins, radical pair mechanism.
