A theorem, originally proven by Shannon, shows that molecular machines can act precisely despite the ubiquitous presence of thermal noise. This is not a quantum nor chemical-bonding effect, but rather it arises from the degree of complexity that a molecular machine can attain by evolving a molecular coding scheme. The channel capacity should be a useful criterion for understanding and designing molecular machines [Maniatis et al., 1982,Beaucage & Caruthers, 1981,,Pabo, 1983,Rastetter, 1983,Wetzel, 1986,Lesk, 1988].
I thank
Herb Schneider,
John Spouge,
Randy Smith,
and
Peter Basser
for many fun and useful discussions;
Doris Schneider, Sislin Schneider,
Sue Aldor and Maureen Manns for their support;
and
Stephen Altschul,
Steve Garavelli,
Rob Harrison,
Jim Hofrichter,
Andrzej Konopka,
Peter Lemkin,
Sarah Lesher,
David Lipman,
Joe Mack,
Jake Maizel,
Hugo Martinez,
Ranjan Muttiah,
Howard Nash,
Peter Rogan,
Denise Rubens,
Morton Schultz,
Bruce Shapiro,
and
R. Michael Stephens
for critically reading the manuscript.
I also thank
Larry Gold for supporting the preliminary stages of this project
under NIH grant GM28755,
Ron Fox for pointing out the form of fD(r),
Richard Pastor for pointing out the need
to account for conformational substates,
and
Gray Abbott for useful discussions on Fourier analysis.
The gumball machine was manufactured by Superior Toy & Mfg. Co. Inc.,
Chicago, IL.
I thank Charles Rockwell for the photography of Fig. 1
.