Cellular information dynamics through transmembrane flow of ions

Gatenby, Robert A., and B. Roy Frieden. “Cellular information dynamics through transmembrane flow of ions.” Scientific reports 7, no. 1 (2017): 1-9.
URL1 URL2

We propose cells generate large transmembrane ion gradients to form information circuits that detect, process, and respond to environmental perturbations or signals. In this model, the specialized gates of transmembrane ion channels function as information detectors that communicate to the cell through rapid and (usually) local pulses of ions. Information in the ion “puffs” is received and processed by the cell through resulting changes in charge density and/or mobile cation (and/or anion) concentrations alter the localization and function of peripheral membrane proteins. The subsequent changes in protein binding to the membrane or activation of K+, Ca2+ or Mg2±dependent enzymes then constitute a cellular response to the perturbation. To test this hypothesis we analyzed ion-based signal transmission as a communication channel operating with coded inputs and decoded outputs. By minimizing the Kullback-Leibler cross entropy HKL(p||q)HKL(p||q) between concentrations of the ion species inside pi(t),i=1,…,Npi(t),i=1,…,N and outside qi(t)qi(t) the cell membrane, we find signal transmission through transmembrane ion flow forms an optimal Shannon information channel that minimizes information loss and maximizes transmission speed. We demonstrate the ion dynamics in neuronal action potentials described by Hodgkin and Huxley (including the equations themselves) represent a special case of these general information principles.

Cited by 10
Related articles