Could humans recognize odor by phonon assisted tunneling?

Our sense of smell relies on sensitive, selective atomic-scale processes that occur when a scent molecule meets specific receptors in the nose. The physical mechanisms of detection are unclear: odorant shape and size are important, but experiment shows them insufficient. One novel proposal suggests receptors are actuated by inelastic electron tunneling from a donor to an acceptor mediated by the odorant, and provides critical discrimination. We test the physical viability of this mechanism using a simple but general model. With parameter values appropriate for biomolecular systems, we find the proposal consistent both with the underlying physics and with observed features of smell. This mechanism suggests a distinct paradigm for selective molecular interactions at receptors (the swipe card model): recognition and actuation involve size and shape, but also exploit other processes.

[1]  J. Ulstrup Charge Transfer Processes in Condensed Media , 1979 .

[2]  A. Stoneham Theory of defects in solids , 1979 .

[3]  R. Reed,et al.  A sense of smell , 1992, Current Biology.

[4]  R. C. Weast CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics , 1973 .

[5]  M. Muir Physical Chemistry , 1888, Nature.

[6]  G. G. Stokes "J." , 1890, The New Yale Book of Quotations.

[7]  Ericka Stricklin-Parker,et al.  Ann , 2005 .

[8]  W. M. Haynes CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics , 1990 .