English

From Structure to Function in Open Ionic Channels

Biomolecules 2015-03-17 v1 Soft Condensed Matter Mathematical Physics math.MP

Abstract

We consider a simple working hypothesis that all permeation properties of open ionic channels can be predicted by understanding electrodiffusion in fixed structures, without invoking conformation changes, or changes in chemical bonds. We know, of course, that ions can bind to specific protein structures, and that this binding is not easily described by the traditional electrostatic equations of physics textbooks, that describe average electric fields, the so-called `mean field'. The question is which specific properties can be explained just by mean field electrostatics and which cannot. I believe the best way to uncover the specific chemical properties of channels is to invoke them as little as possible, seeking to explain with mean field electrostatics first. Then, when phenomena appear that cannot be described that way, by the mean field alone, we turn to chemically specific explanations, seeking the appropriate tools (of electrochemistry, Langevin, or molecular dynamics, for example) to understand them. In this spirit, we turn now to the structure of open ionic channels, apply the laws of electrodiffusion to them, and see how many of their properties we can predict just that way.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1011.2939,
  title  = {From Structure to Function in Open Ionic Channels},
  author = {Bob Eisenberg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1011.2939},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

Nearly final version of publication

R2 v1 2026-06-21T16:42:57.480Z