Can faint flashes of light tell us how cells are feeling?
And if we learn their language, could we ever take control, asks
Bennett Daviss
MASAKI KOBAYASHI is looking for the inner
light in all of us. A physicist at the Tohoku Institute of Technology in
Sendai, Kobayashi is one of a small number of researchers around the
globe who spend hours locked in darkened labs in the hope of glimpsing
the faint glow that comes from all living tissue.
This glow is so elusive that we can only see
it with the aid of the most sensitive detectors. But we're not talking
about psychic auras here. These faint throbs of light are probably
little more than a by-product of the cell's own metabolism-the
pint-sized equivalent of a spluttering car exhaust.
Yet researchers hope that one day
differences in the light from healthy and cancerous cells will give
doctors a new non-invasive tool for spotting disease. Others go further.
They think that cells may coordinate their activities via patterns of
photons. A few even dare to suggest that these photons may actually
mediate consciousness itself.
Living creatures can undoubtedly emit light:
around 80 per cent of marine creatures, for example, fireflies and
quite a few fungi and centipedes use bioluminescence as their calling
card. Generating this light usually involves a chemical reaction between
ATP-the cell's energy store-oxygen and a molecule called luciferin.
Luciferin converts the chemical energy locked up in ATP into photons of
light (New Scientist, 22 July 2000, p 34). In most cases these cells produce a weak flash that is just visible to the human eye.
But the kind of light that Kobayashi is
interested in is far weaker-it is typically several million times as
faint as the light from a firefly. In fact, the trickle of "biophotons"
is so weak that researchers are only now beginning to agree where it
comes from.
The main source is free radicals: atoms or
molecules with an unbound electron that are desperate to pair up with
electrons from other molecules. Free radicals are often an unwelcome
by-product of the reactions that take place at the inner membrane of
mitochondria-the power houses of the cell that use oxygen to make the
cell's fuel ATP.
Free radicals are seriously bad news. When
they bump into other molecules in the cell such as proteins, lipids or
sugars, they destroy them by slicing them up into small chunks.
Most biological reactions take place in
several small steps, each one designed to use energy efficiently. But
these free radical reactions are so energetic that they tend to occur in
one huge step. This means not all the energy is used up in the
reaction. A little is absorbed by an electron on the molecule that's
under attack. This electron becomes unstable and sheds its extra energy
as a photon of light.
Since enzymes and anti-oxidants usually mop
up reactive oxygen molecules and free radicals before they can damage
the cell, a healthy cell tends to release very few photons, maybe only
tens per minute. Not easy to collect, even in a pitch-black lab.
This is one of the reasons the phenomenon
has been so difficult to study. In the 1970s, biochemists first
considered biophotons as a way of studying reactive oxygen molecules.
"However biophoton emission is so weak and the mechanisms of production
are so complex, most biochemists were put off," Kobayashi says. For
example, veteran biophysicist Britton Chance at the University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, showed that light was coming from free
radicals created in isolated mitochondria. "But detailed studies failed
to detect a signal in dog's brain," he says.
Things got a little easier in the 1980s when
manufacturers such as Hamamatsu, a Japanese company specialising in
light detectors called photomultipliers, developed new highly sensitive
instruments designed to record weak light signals. Keen to exploit this
opportunity, and to seed a new bio-optics industry, the Japanese
government funded a five-year, multibillion-yen research programme into
biophotons in 1986. Humio Inaba, an engineer at the Research Institute
of Electrical Communication at Tohoku University headed the project.
Dozens of researchers across Japan,
including Kobayashi, found these emissions coming out of everything from
plant seeds to fruit flies. Inaba also discovered that injured or
stressed cells release far more photons than their healthy counterparts.
In particular, adzuki and soybean seedlings damaged with cross-shaped
cuts emit high levels of photons at the site of the injury.
Other teams have spotted increased levels of
biophotons where cells are damaged. Ken Muldrew, a biophysicist at the
University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, tore tree leaves apart near
his sensitive measuring equipment: "We got an enormous peak of tens of
thousands of photons, a burst of light," says Muldrew. "A leaf screams
when you tear it, but you see the scream instead of hear it."
It isn't just plant cells. At the Institute
of Physics at the University of Catania in Italy, isolated mammalian
tumour cells ejected photons at rates as high as 1400 per square
centimetre per minute-healthy tissues average rates of less than 40. In a
study on bladder cancer, Kobayashi's team found that the light
intensity of tumour cells is 4 times as high as the surrounding healthy
tissue.
Clearly when cells are stressed or damaged,
they pump out free radicals-and this produces light. But can doctors use
these distress flares as warnings of disease or illness? Almost
certainly, says Reiner Vogel, a biophysicist at the University of
Freiburg in Germany. "The emission may give a very sensitive indication
of the conditions within a cell and on the functioning of the cellular
defence mechanism," he says. Philip Coleridge Smith, a surgeon at
University College Medical School in London, agrees. You could perhaps
use biophotons to assess inflammation in tissues, he suggests, which
might warn of leg ulcers, for example.
To make a diagnosis what we need now is a
sensitive detector and analysis system, preferably non-invasive, that
will measure an emission and even identify its origins-perhaps from the
spectrum or statistical properties of the photons, Kobayashi says. He's
trying to find out if you can use photons to spot disease in people,
rather than in cells in a lab, and is developing ways to convert
patterns of photon emissions into images of the body that resemble
X-rays or CAT scans.
Turn to the light
Yet some believe that biophotons are far
more than just distress signals. In the early 1990s, Guenter
Albrecht-Buehler, a biophysicist at Northwestern University Medical
School in Chicago, discovered that some cells can detect and respond to
light from others.
He shone infrared light onto a mixture of
cell-sized latex beads and mouse fibroblast cells. Many of the cells
began to stretch out their arm-like pseudopodia for light scattered
towards them by the beads, and soon these cells were heading directly
for the beads. Some even turned 180° to reach them. (With little power
and a wavelength of around 850 nanometres, the light created virtually
no heat, so the cells weren't simply moving towards warmth, argues
Albrecht-Buehler.) And since some cells reached out to two different
light sources of equal intensities at the same time, it seems that they
could "see" each source distinctly, he suggests.
In other experiments, Albrecht-Buehler
spread hamster cells on both sides of a sheet of glass. As the cells
grew, he found that those on one side shifted around until they lay at
angles of more than 45° to those on the other side of the glass. But
when he added a filter layer to the glass that blocked infrared light
transmission from one side to the other, the cells grew in random
directions (New Scientist, 7 November 1992, p 14).
Tissues favour a criss-cross arrangement of
cells because it gives them extra strength, so perhaps the cells on the
glass were using light to signal their orientation. If so, they must
have some kind of eye. Albrecht-Buehler thinks the cell's centrioles fit
the bill. These cylindrical structures have slanted "blades" which he
believes act as simple blinds. By only allowing light into the centriole
from certain angles, the blinds enable simple photoreceptors inside the
centrioles such as haem molecules to tell which direction photons are
coming from. And microtubules-hollow filaments that thread through
cells-could act as optical fibres, he believes, feeding light towards
the centrioles from the cell's wall.
But why should cells want to detect light?
The most obvious answer is that they are talking to each other, says
Albrecht-Buehler. Cells in embryos might signal with photons so that
they know how and where they fit into the developing body.
And now he wants to learn their language. He
envisages doctors telling cells what they want them to do in words they
understand. You might tell cancer cells to stop growing or encourage
cells near wounds to start again. "We may learn to compose our own
messages in the language of cells to compel them to carry out
specialised tasks that they've never performed."
Albrecht-Beuhler isn't the first to make
this controversial claim. In the 1980s Fritz-Albert Popp, then a
lecturer at the University of Marburg in Germany, became interested in
the optical behaviour of cells. In a series of experiments Popp found
that two cells separated by an opaque barrier release biophotons in
uncoordinated patterns. Remove the barrier and the cells soon begin
releasing photons in synchrony. The cells, Popp concluded, were
communicating by light.
Cyril Frank, professor of surgery at the
University of Calgary's medical school believes Popp could be right. A
photon could trigger events in the receiving cell, making it change its
rate of division or express different proteins, he suggests. "In our
experiments, we're trying to find out if these sorts of triggers can do
things like that." Although not ready to disclose any data, he says
they're "getting some encouraging results".
Keep it simple
But Muldrew feels biophotons can only
communicate simple messages. "What biophotons communicate is the fact
that certain oxidative reactions are going on."
It's hard to know whether glowing cells will
ever shed light on disease, help scientists to work out the language of
cells or even whether biophotons play a role in consciousness (see
"Inner Light"). Cells are simply far too sensitive to factors that alter
the rate at which photons are emitted. "The problem is reproducibility
of results, even for relatively simple systems like cell cultures," says
Barbara Chwirot, head of the Laboratory of Molecular Biology of Cancer
at Nicolas Copernicus University in Torun, Poland. Light emission may
depend on free radicals, but it is also affected by enzyme activity and
the supply of protective antioxidants such as vitamin E or carotenoids.
"Direct diagnosis of disease will remain difficult without some
technical or medical breakthrough," says Kobayashi.
For now the focus is on more prosaic
pursuits. Popp, who now heads the International Institute of Biophysics
in Neuss, Germany, an association of scientists interested in biophoton
research, runs a company called Biophotonen that offers its expertise in
reading photon emissions to gauge the freshness and purity of food. One
of its first projects is with German brewer Bitburger, the idea being
to spot the glow from harmful bacteria before they can get into its
beer. A Chinese research group in Beijing is also perfecting a
photon-based test for the presence of microbes that could be used in the
food industry.
But one day soon, bugs may not be the only
things under the lens. Kobayashi hopes that a new generation of
detectors, such as avalanche photodiodes that boost the chances of
detecting individual photons from around 20 per cent up to 80 per cent
or more, could provide the breakthrough he needs to develop a scanner to
diagnose disease. It might take 10 or 20 years, Kobayashi says, but at
last he thinks he can see light at the end of the tunnel.
Inner light
Some maverick theorists suggest that the
notion of a common cellular language puts biophotons at the centre not
only of biological communication, but also of consciousness. Scott
Hagan, a theoretical physicist at the British Columbia Institute of
Technology in Burnaby, has been pondering the enigmas of awareness since
he shared an office in grad school with a neurophysiologist. "In every
other process, every atom or molecule does its own thing," he says.
However, we cannot think unless cells in the brain function
simultaneously, as parts of a whole. There's no way that classical
physics can explain this, he says. "But in quantum physics, there are
systems that know they're wholes. These are called quantum coherent
states." These are states in which the wave functions of atoms or
molecules blend to form one single unit (New Scientist, 24 March
2001, p 42). And the search for quantum coherent states in the brain
leads inside individual neurons, says Hagan, to their skeleton-like
framework of microtubules. These thin tubes are thought to move energy
about the cell, help build junctions between neurons and maintain
memory. And anaesthetics work by binding to them, says Hagan. "Because
anaesthetics make consciousness evaporate, their site of action is
important in determining the mechanisms responsible for consciousness,"
Hagan says. In a highly speculative theory, Hagan and Stuart Hameroff,
associate director of the Center for Consciousness Studies at the
University of Arizona, suggest that quantum coherence in the protein
subunits of microtubules may give rise to consciousness (New Scientist, 20 August 1994, p 35). And, says Hameroff, biophotons could somehow control this process.
Further reading:
- Photon statistics and correlation analysis of ultraweak light originating from living organisms by Masaki Kobayashi and Humio Inaba, Applied Optics, vol 39, p 183 (2000)
- In vivo imaging of spontaneous ultraweak photon emission from a rat's brain by Masaki Kobayashi and others, Neuroscience Research, vol 34, p 103 (1999)
|
Bennett Daviss is a science writer in New Hampshire
From New Scientist magazine, vol 173 issue 2331, 23/02/2002, page 30
|