Physical Society Colloquium
Nanopore DNA Sequencing: Erwin Schrödinger knew how to do it 100 years ago before he played with his famous “cat”
Department of Physics Brown University
The idea of using ionic current through a small pore as a DNA sequencing
mechanism was appealing and deceitfully simple. All one has to do is to
measure how the current varies as a function of time while a single stranded
DNA is driven through by electric field. Comparing to the massive amount
of effort using DNA polymerase and expensive optics, this polymerase-free
approach drew lots of attention from physicists: is it physically possible to
resolve DNA bases spaced at 0.4nm apart and with minute differences in their
atomic composition? It turns out, after two decades of trying, it became clear
that it is indeed possible, the physics was there all along, in Schrödinger's
1915 paper in fact, ten years before he invented the Schrödinger equation (its
solutions imply a “cat” can be both dead and alive at
the same time). I will discuss the current effort in building such a machine
based on Schrödinger's first-passage time theory and the principle of kinetic
proofreading by Hopfield and Ninio.
Friday, October 5th 2018, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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