The building blocks of life are nicely suited for a very crowded environment
by MikeGeneFrom here:
Molecular "computations" are essential for the survival of all organisms. To work, the molecules must pinpoint and then bind to specific counterparts while swimming in a thick, erratic molecular stew - a bit like finding a friend in a busy subway station during rush hour.
How do they accomplish this feat?
Dr. Tsvi Tlusty and Yonatan Savir, of the Weizmann Institute, may have found the answer. A simple biophysical model they developed indicates that in picking out the target molecule from a crowd of look-alikes, the recognizer has an advantage if it is slightly off-target. This may appear counterintuitive: why search for a key that does not match its lock exactly, and then require that the imperfect key warp its shape to fit the lock?
But the researchers' model shows that the key's deformation actually helps in discerning the right target. Although the energy required to deform the molecular key slightly lowers the probability of its binding to the right target, it also reduces the probability that it will bind to a wrong one by quite a bit. Thus, the quality of recognition - i.e. the ratio of the right to wrong binding probabilities - increases.

























July 31st, 2007 at 12:22 am
I wonder if there's something similar at work in this stuff:
In Games, an Insight Into the Rules of Evolution
….
Comment by stunney — July 31, 2007 @ 12:22 am
July 31st, 2007 at 8:25 am
Hi Mike,
From your link…
I believe this gets into the evolutionary advantages of doing a "quantum database search". But instead of searching a virtual database, the DNA is searching a real-world database made up of "friends" in a very "busy subway station".
From Patel's Quantum Algorithms and the Genetic Code
Humans are directly using DNA to build quantum computers. The DNA structure appears tailor made to amplify quantum effects (very long string of quantum sized components). Now, it turns out the DNA language itself is optimized to take advantage of a computer-like algorithm.
Comment by Thought Provoker — July 31, 2007 @ 8:25 am
July 31st, 2007 at 4:43 pm
Thought Provoker wrote:
Isn't optimization a design-theoretic concept?
Kinda like the inverse-square form taken by the law of gravity being optimized for star-formation and stable planetary orbits, which apparently it is.
Comment by stunney — July 31, 2007 @ 4:43 pm
July 31st, 2007 at 6:36 pm
Hi Stunny,
It is one of the reasons I feel it is appropriate to call the Third Choice an ID hypothesis.
I feel life on Earth started with Quantum Mechanics "front loaded" in it and QM has guided the life process ever since.
I suggest there is no such thing as natural randomness, just the ultimate complexity of a completely interconnected spacetime universe.
Since it is most likely the basis behind the interconnected quantum effects will remain unknown (non-deterministic) it is, FAPP, metaphysical.
In short, it doesn't bother me to have people from either or both sides of the Culture War presume the Third Choice is consistent with their philosophical/religious opinions.
Comment by Thought Provoker — July 31, 2007 @ 6:36 pm