Radical Scavenging Could Answer the Challenge Posed by Electron–Electron Dipolar Interactions in the Cryptochrome Compass Model
Chemistry
0303 health sciences
03 medical and health sciences
magnetoreception
electron−electron dipolar coupling
radical pair mechanism
three-radical effects
cryptochrome
540
530
QD1-999
DOI:
10.1021/jacsau.1c00332
Publication Date:
2021-10-06T20:05:38Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Many birds are endowed with a visual magnetic sense that may exploit magnetosensitive radical recombination processes in the protein cryptochrome. In this widely accepted but unproven model, geomagnetic sensitivity is suggested to arise from variations in the recombination rate of a pair of radicals, whose unpaired electron spins undergo coherent singlet-triplet interconversion in the geomagnetic field by coupling to nuclear spins via hyperfine interactions. However, simulations of this conventional radical pair mechanism (RPM) predicted only tiny magnetosensitivities for realistic conditions because the RPM's directional sensitivity is strongly suppressed by the intrinsic electron-electron dipolar (EED) interactions, casting doubt on its viability as a magnetic sensor. We show how this RPM-suppression problem is overcome in a three-radical system in which a third "scavenger" radical reacts with one member of the primary pair. We use this finding to predict substantial magnetic field effects that exceed those of the RPM in the presence of EED interactions in animal cryptochromes.
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