Technische Universität München
Protein-based quantum sensors can be specifically controlled using radio waves
TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH
NEWS RELEASE
Biochemical Quantum Sensor Instead of Semiconductor
Proteins Can Be Selectively Controlled with Radio Waves
- Proteins act as optical magnetic field sensors
- Natural quantum sensors deployable directly in cells in the future
- Using a potential magnetic field sensor in birds
A significant advance in biological quantum sensing: A research team led by the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has discovered and tested a new mechanism of action in which proteins can be controlled with radio waves. In doing so, they influence a sensitive quantum state known as spin and make it visible via light. In the future, such findings could help detect and even direct biochemical processes in cells simply from the outside using radio waves.
Until now, quantum sensing has primarily been known from solid-state materials such as diamonds with deliberately introduced tiny defects. The researchers are now transferring this principle to proteins - biological molecules that can be genetically produced and specifically tailored. In the future, this could allow quantum sensors to be built directly into cells or tissue.
These protein-based sensors are potentially particularly well suited for biosensing - that is, for imaging living cells, tissues, or organs. In theory, they sit directly where measurement is needed, making them suitable for studies in organisms - unlike bulky solid-state sensors.
Dominik Bucher, Professor of Quantum Sensing at the TUM School of Natural Sciences and last author of the study published in Nature Biotechnology, explains: "In contrast to established solid-state-based systems, protein-based approaches can not only serve as sensors, but also open up the prospective possibility of controlling biological processes with radio waves in a targeted manner - an extremely exciting prospect."
What exactly did the researchers do?
The researchers irradiated two light-sensitive proteins - so-called flavoproteins - with blue light. The starting point was a cryptochrome, a protein studied in biology as a potential magnetic field sensor in birds. The protein samples used in the study were provided by the research group of Prof. Erik Schleicher at the University of Freiburg.
The light generates spin-correlated radical pairs with extraordinary spin properties in the proteins: these are coupled electron pairs that are extremely sensitive to magnetic fields. This behavior can be made visible via the luminescence intensity of these proteins.
The researchers then deliberately applied radio waves and were able to alter the luminescence of the proteins - and thus the underlying radical pairs. This demonstrates that the sensitive quantum states in the biological environment can be influenced by electromagnetic fields.
The proteins act as magnetic field sensors and can even make magnetic field distributions in the samples visible. The signal is read out purely optically via light - similarly to solid-state-based quantum sensors.
Even though this is basic research, the findings have great potential for near-term biotechnological applications. Kun Meng, doctoral student at the TUM School of Natural Sciences and first author of the study, explains: "The possibilities range from biological quantum sensors to radio wave-controlled cell activity, such as remotely controlled gene expression."
Publication:
Kun Meng, Linyan Nie, Johannes Berger et al. "Optically detected and radio wave-controlled spin chemistry in flavoproteins", published in Nature Biotechnology, May 29, 2026, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-026-03158-5
Further information:
- The research also involved members of the Cluster of Excellence Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST) as well as the University of Freiburg and the University of Marburg.
- Prof. Bucher is a Rudolf Mößbauer Professor - named after Rudolf Mößbauer, the Nobel Prize winner in Physics who completed his doctorate at TUM and later served as a professor there.
- Research on quantum technologies at TUM
Scientific contact:
Technical University of Munich
TUM School of Natural Sciences
Professorship of Quantum Sensing
dominik.bucher@tum.de">dominik.bucher@tum.de
Contact at TUM Corporate Communications Center:
Ulrich Meyer
Press Spokesperson
+49 89 289 22779
ulrich.meyer@tum.de">ulrich.meyer@tum.de
The Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of the world’s leading universities in terms of research, teaching and innovation, with around 700 professorships, 52,000 students and 13,000 staff. TUM’s range of subjects includes computer sciences, engineering, natural and life sciences, medicine, economics and social sciences. As an entrepreneurial university, TUM envisages itself as a global hub of knowledge exchange, open to society. Every year, around 100 start-ups are founded at TUM, which acts as a key player in Munich’s high-tech ecosystem. The university is represented around the world by its TUM Asia campus in Singapore along with offices in Beijing, Brussels, Mumbai, San Francisco, São Paulo and Shenzhen. Nobel Prize laureates and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde and Rudolf Mößbauer have conducted research at TUM, which was awarded the title of University of Excellence in 2006, 2012, 2019 and 2026. International rankings regularly cite TUM as the best university in the European Union.