2015
DOI: 10.1038/srep09215
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Isotopic Resonance Hypothesis: Experimental Verification by Escherichia coli Growth Measurements

Abstract: Isotopic composition of reactants affects the rates of chemical and biochemical reactions. As a rule, enrichment of heavy stable isotopes leads to progressively slower reactions. But the recent isotopic resonance hypothesis suggests that the dependence of the reaction rate upon the enrichment degree is not monotonous. Instead, at some “resonance” isotopic compositions, the kinetics increases, while at “off-resonance” compositions the same reactions progress slower. To test the predictions of this hypothesis fo… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
(166 reference statements)
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“…The temperature dependence of the effect magnitude (a significant effect at 25°C and hardly noticeable effect at 39°C) is also in agreement with the IsoRes theory and previous observations[32]. Since the impact of the isotopic resonance is somewhat similar to a temperature increase, the biological growth should accelerate more, in relative terms, when higher temperature leads to faster growth (for E .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…The temperature dependence of the effect magnitude (a significant effect at 25°C and hardly noticeable effect at 39°C) is also in agreement with the IsoRes theory and previous observations[32]. Since the impact of the isotopic resonance is somewhat similar to a temperature increase, the biological growth should accelerate more, in relative terms, when higher temperature leads to faster growth (for E .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…As expected, the effect was even stronger for Venus’s composition (p<10 −6 and <10 −5 , respectively). The relative value of the effect was ≈1% for Mars and ≈2–3% for Venus; such effects are large compared to the precision of measurements (≈0.05% after statistical processing[32]). At 39°C, the temperature of the maximum growth of E .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This theory predicts that at certain abundances of the stable isotopes, the rates of chemical and biochemical reactions accelerate, affecting biological growth. For example, the resonance conditions are predicted to occur at 0.35% of 13 C, 3.5% of 15 N, 6.6% of 18 O and 0.03% of 2 H, and these predictions were confirmed using experiments with E. coli grown at varying isotopic composition [6]. Although these resonance isotopic concentrations are too high to occur naturally in any environment on Earth, they are within the range of concentrations applied in laboratory and field experiments with isotope-enriched substrates (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%