Lipid ion channels and the role of proteins
Lars D. Mosgaard, Thomas Heimburg

TL;DR
Lipid membranes can exhibit ion conduction events similar to protein channels, challenging the interpretation of channel data and suggesting a need to reconsider the mechanisms underlying ion conductance in biological membranes.
Contribution
This paper highlights the functional similarities between lipid and protein channels, emphasizing that lipid channels can mimic many properties of protein channels, which impacts understanding of ion conduction mechanisms.
Findings
Lipid membranes display quantized ion conduction similar to protein channels.
Lipid channels can be gated by voltage, drugs, tension, and temperature.
Lipid channels challenge the specificity assumptions in nerve pulse theories.
Abstract
Synthetic lipid membranes in the absence of proteins can display quantized conduction events for ions that are virtually indistinguishable from those of protein channel. By indistinguishable we mean that one cannot decide based on the current trace alone whether conductance events originate from a membrane, which does or does not contain channel proteins. Additional evidence is required to distinguish between the two cases, and it is not always certain that such evidence can be provided. The phenomenological similarities are striking and span a wide range of phenomena: The typical conductances are of equal order and both lifetime distributions and current histograms are similar. One finds conduction bursts, flickering, and multistep-conductance. Lipid channels can be gated by voltage, and can be blocked by drugs. They respond to changes in lateral membrane tension and temperature. Thus,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIon channel regulation and function · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Electrochemical Analysis and Applications
