Unity and Diversity of Intracellular pH Maintenance Mechanisms
Guillaume Terradot, Vincent Danos

TL;DR
This paper derives a thermodynamic bound on the energy cost of maintaining intracellular ionic gradients, explaining universal features and diversity of transporter mechanisms across different organisms.
Contribution
It provides a unifying thermodynamic framework that explains intracellular pH regulation, transporter diversity, and adaptations to environmental stress from first principles.
Findings
Universal K+-rich, Na+-poor cytoplasm explained by membrane permeability asymmetry.
Extremophiles face higher maintenance costs under extreme conditions.
Transport architecture diversity arises from environmental variability and efficiency limits.
Abstract
All cells must sustain ionic motive forces (IMFs) -- the electrochemical gradients of permeant ions, together with the membrane potential they produce -- to regulate intracellular pH, drive secondary transport, and power ATP synthesis. Because membranes are imperfectly impermeable, IMFs continuously dissipate through passive leakage, and active transport must compensate at an energetic cost that competes with growth and biosynthesis. How environmental conditions set this cost, and why cells across the tree of life share a common ionic logic yet deploy strikingly diverse transporter repertoires, has lacked a unifying quantitative account. Here we derive a thermodynamic lower bound on the power required to maintain IMFs at steady state. The bound equals the rate of free-energy dissipation by ion leakage, holds across a broad family of electrophysiological models, and is independent of…
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