Abstract
The textbook picture of nerve activity is that of a propagating voltage pulse driven by electrical currents through ion channel proteins, which are gated by changes in voltage, temperature, pressure or by drugs. All function is directly attributed to single molecules. We show that this leaves out many important thermodynamic couplings between different variables. A more recent alternative picture for the nerve pulse is of thermodynamic nature. It considers the nerve pulse as a soliton, i.e., a macroscopic excited region with properties that are influenced by thermodynamic variables including voltage, temperature, pressure and chemical potentials of membrane components. All thermodynamic variables are strictly coupled. We discuss the consequences for medical treatment in a view where one can compensate a maladjustment of one variable by adjusting another variable. For instance, one can explain why anesthesia can be counteracted by hydrostatic pressure and decrease in pH, suggest reasons why lithium over-dose may lead to tremor, and how tremor is related to alcohol intoxication. Lithium action as well as the effect of ethanol and the anesthetic ketamine in bipolar patients may fall in similar thermodynamic patterns. Such couplings remain obscure in a purely molecular picture. Other fields of application are the response of nerve activity to muscle stretching and the possibility of neural stimulation by ultrasound.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Progress in Biophysics & Molecular Biology |
Volume | 173 |
Pages (from-to) | 24-35 |
Number of pages | 12 |
ISSN | 0079-6107 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 28 May 2022 |
Keywords
- Nerves
- Action potential
- Hodgkin -Huxley model
- Anesthesia
- Ion channels
- Thermodynamic couplings
- LIPID-MEMBRANES
- INTRACELLULAR PH
- ION CHANNELS
- PHASE-TRANSITION
- TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE
- CONDUCTION-VELOCITY
- MELTING TRANSITION
- HEAT-PRODUCTION
- IN-VITRO
- MUSCLE