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Published October 2017 | public
Journal Article

Musings on mechanism: quest for a quark theory of proteins?

Abstract

The give and take between biology and physics is an important part of the history of modern science, with this partnership perhaps now more intimate than ever. In this essay, I explore the ways in which these different fields can strengthen each other through their distinct outlooks on some of the most important questions being asked about the living world. In particular, I highlight three areas where the perspective from physics might lead to deeper insights into the workings of cells. First, I consider what it means for two ostensibly unrelated problems to be the same, and how such sameness can provide unexpected insights into apparently unrelated phenomena. Second, I consider different conceptions of what constitutes a mechanistic understanding of a given phenomenon with an emphasis on nonmolecular notions of mechanism. The third idea is the importance of "toy problems" as a way of providing foundational insights into the real problems. Though my focus here is primarily on ways in which physics approaches might prove interesting in biology, I close with an example of how biology might substantially alter physics by providing a forum and the tools to uncover a fundamental understanding of nonequilibrium phenomena.—Phillips, R. Musings on mechanism: quest for a quark theory of proteins?

Additional Information

© 2017 FASEB. Received June 25, 2017. Accepted July 5, 2017.v The author is grateful to Stephanie Barnes, Cliff Brangwynne, Griffin Chure, Hernan Garcia, Stephan Grill, Jeremy Gunawardena, Christina Hueschen, Jane Kondev, Michael Lässig, Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, Ron Milo, Thoru Pederson, Manuel Razo, Mike Rosen, Clarissa Scholes and Julie Theriot for useful discussions and/or commenting on the manuscript, though the views expressed here should not be blamed on them. The author is also grateful to the U.S. National Institutes of Health for support through Directors Pioneer Award DP1 OD000217 and National Institute of General Medical Sciences Grant R01 GM085286. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (Santa Barbara, CA, USA) where much of this essay was written. Finally, the referencing provided here is cursory and intended to guide the reader to the literature, and does not attempt to provide a scholarly assessment of the many excellent contributions to the case studies described in this essay and not cited here.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023