McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Physical Society Colloquium

What is Life?” Can we Measure it?

R. J. Dwayne Miller

Departments of Chemistry and Physics
University of Toronto

The posed quintessential question is not cast as an origins of life issue here but rather directed towards understanding the underlying physics by which chemistry breathes life into otherwise inanimate matter. The real issue is how chemistry scales in complexity up to the level of biological systems. For even relatively small molecules (e.g., 10 to 100 atoms), there are an enormous number of possible nuclear configurations that could propagate the system from one molecular form to another during a chemical event. Chemistry is inherently a high dimensional problem of order 3N (N= number of atoms) and highly nonlinear in sampling rates for different reaction trajectories. To explain the observed time scales for chemistry and biological processes, there must be an enormous reduction in dimensionality at the barrier crossing region, controlling the kinetics, in which a few key modes direct the chemistry – irrespective of complexity. The challenge is to try to unearth these motions and to understand a priori which motions are directing the chemistry and thereby biological functions. With the recent advent of ultrabright electron sources, it is now possible to directly observe the atomic motions involved to complete the picture. Based on model systems, a simple concept is introduced to understand the spatially correlated forces leading to generalized reaction mechanisms, which makes chemistry a transferrable concept. This insight is based on a molecular frame of reference. The problem is much more challenging within cells where the number of possible interactions becomes truly astronomical, as will be discussed. The lessons learned above give hope to find similar dynamically coupled spatial correlations, but these will be related to free energy gradients that arise within intracellular architecture. New technologies, based on the space charge limits mastered in ultrabright electron source development, will dramatically improve ion collection for spatial imaging mass spectrometry that will enable us to look inside the cell to directly observe the driving forces for living systems, i.e., to quantify life. This prospect promises to fill in the gaps between genetic information and protein expression, from the blue print to the actual execution of the code. The specific technological requirements under development to achieve this Moon Shot for Biology will be discussed as part of proposal for a strategic initiative to map the cell.

Friday, September 15th 2023, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)