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2 March 2011

Quantum Microbiology

and
1
School of Environmental Sciences, University of Guelph, 50 Stone Rd., East, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
2
Biotechnology Research Institute, National Research Council of Canada, 6100 Royalmount Ave., Montreal, QC H4P 2R2, Canada
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Abstract

During his famous 1943 lecture series at Trinity College Dublin, the reknown physicist Erwin Schrödinger discussed the failure and challenges of interpreting life by classical physics alone and that a new approach, rooted in Quantum principles, must be involved. Quantum events are simply a level of organization below the molecular level. This includes the atomic and subatomic makeup of matter in microbial metabolism and structures, as well as the organic, genetic information codes of DNA and RNA. Quantum events at this time do not elucidate, for example, how specific genetic instructions were first encoded in an organic genetic code in microbial cells capable of growth and division, and its subsequent evolution over 3.6 to 4 billion years. However, due to recent technological advances, biologists and physicists are starting to demonstrate linkages between various quantum principles like quantum tunneling, entanglement and coherence in biological processes illustrating that nature has exerted some level quantum control to optimize various processes in living organisms. In this article we explore the role of quantum events in microbial processes and endeavor to show that after nearly 67 years, Schrödinger was prophetic and visionary in his view of quantum theory and its connection with some of the fundamental mechanisms of life.

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