Quantum Effect in the Brain Challenges Conventional Wisdom

Amyloid Fibril Formation Is a Neuroprotective Responsive
Recent research suggests that a quantum effect in amyloid fibrils, typically associated with Alzheimer’s disease, could be the body’s adaptive response to oxidative stress rather than a cause of the disease. This discovery challenges current treatment approaches and highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research in understanding and potentially curing neurodegenerative disorders. Credit: Quantum Biology Laboratory: Nathan Babcock and Philip Kurian

A unique quantum effect in biology may hold the key to deciphering a common indicator of Alzheimer’s disease, challenging existing assumptions about the condition and guiding the quest for a cure.

Amyloid fibrils are fibrous protein structures in the brain, linked to neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. These fibrils are commonly targeted by experimental treatments aimed at combating these diseases, typically through drugs designed to decrease the amount of amyloids or inhibit further formation.

But many people who test positive for significant amounts of amyloid don’t develop dementia at all, and so far, treatment regimens that target amyloid have not been successful. Another known indicator of Alzheimer’s is the so-called allostatic load, a general term for the cumulative burden of chronic wear and tear on the body. The more oxidative stress, the higher the load and the higher risk of dementia.

Previously, a group of researchers found that a certain quantum effect—single-photon superradiance—could survive the turbulent environment of the human body in networks of the amino acid tryptophan, and could potentially mitigate oxidative stress in the body. Now that group, led by Dr. Philip Kurian, principal investigator and founding director of the Quantum Biology Laboratory at Howard University in Washington, D.C., has established that these tryptophan networks have an even stronger ability to harness superradiant effects in amyloid fibrils than in the structures they studied previously. The result, published in Frontiers in Physics, has prominent implications for the role of amyloid in Alzheimer’s disease.

Quantum Effects in Amyloid Fibrils

“Our previous experimental confirmation of single-photon superradiance in protein fibers encouraged us to examine other neurobiological architectures, including amyloid fibrils,” said Kurian. “While the superradiant enhancement of the quantum yield we saw previously was modest though detectable, our predicted superradiant enhancement for amyloid fibrils is enormous, up to five times the quantum yield of an individual tryptophan molecule. This finding has the potential to transform available treatments for dementia, and to revolutionize our understanding of information processing throughout the web of life.”


Amyloid fibrils have been targeted in a variety of neurodegenerative diseases. The amyloid cascade hypothesis, on which many modern Alzheimer’s treatments are based, presumes that these fibrils are the cause of the disease. However, emerging evidence suggests that amyloid fibrils supporting vast spiral architectures of tryptophan molecules serve a photoprotective role as superabsorbers of high-energy UV light produced by oxidative metabolism. Such tryptophan networks have been experimentally confirmed in other cellular protein filaments to exhibit a uniquely quantum optical effect known as single-photon superradiance, which enables the photoprotective response. Credit: Quantum Biology Laboratory: Nathan Babcock and Philip Kurian

Oxidative stress, a contributing factor linked with Alzheimer’s, occurs when the body produces a large number of free radicals, which can emit damaging, high-energy UV photons. Single-photon superradiance is a quantum phenomenon where a collective network of molecules can very efficiently absorb these high-energy light particles and re-emit them at a lower, safer energy.

Implications for Alzheimer’s Disease and Future Research

Because many amyloid fibrils have a very high density of tryptophans arranged in multiple helices, their ability to absorb damaging photons and downconvert the energy—photoprotection—is much stronger than anyone suspected before. This could suggest that amyloid, rather than being a cause of Alzheimer’s, is actually the body’s adaptive response to a stressful environment that is awash with a higher proportion of UV photons from free radicals.

“The Kurian group has made an outstanding scientific contribution in elucidating the potential role of amyloid fibrils in mitigating oxidative stress and photophysical damage,” said Professor Lon Schneider, director of the USC California Alzheimer’s Disease Center, who was not involved in the research. “This work has profound implications for understanding the pathophysiology of Alzheimer’s disease, as researchers generally work under the assumption that amyloid must be the proper target for treatment. On the contrary, Kurian’s work suggests that, rather than a cause of the disease, amyloid aggregation and fibril formation are a protective response.”

The next step is to validate this prediction experimentally, but Kurian also wants colleagues in biology and neuroscience to start thinking more broadly about how quantum perspectives are an essential part of the life sciences. “We want to help others see that the interactions of light and quantum matter have significant relevance to all living systems,” he said.

The first author on the paper, Mr. Hamza Patwa, is a 2024 Barry Goldwater Scholar and a senior undergraduate intern in the Quantum Biology Laboratory. “For me,” he said, “this work represents what true science is supposed to be. To make such a cognitive leap, one has to be versed in several different disciplines: open quantum systems, computational biology, and photophysics. It has taught me that science doesn’t always have to be separated into mutually exclusive categories. When we try to use tools from whichever subfields are necessary to solve a problem, this is where the awesome explanatory power of science is revealed.”

Reference: “Quantum-enhanced photoprotection in neuroprotein architectures emerges from collective light-matter interactions” by Hamza Patwa, Nathan S. Babcock and Philip Kurian, 18 June 2024, Frontiers in Physics.
DOI: 10.3389/fphy.2024.1387271

The study was funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Guy Foundation, and the Chaikin-Wile Foundation.