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The voltage-dependent anion channel as a biological transistor: theoretical considerations
Authors:V.?V.?Lemeshko  mailto:vvasilie@perseus.unalmed.edu.co"   title="  vvasilie@perseus.unalmed.edu.co"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,S.?V.?Lemeshko
Affiliation:(1) School of Physics, Department of Science, National University of Colombia, Medellin Branch, AA3840 Medellin, Colombia;(2) Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA
Abstract:
The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) is a porin of the mitochondrial outer membrane with a bell-shaped permeability-voltage characteristic. This porin restricts the flow of negatively charged metabolites at certain non-zero voltages, and thus might regulate their flux across the mitochondrial outer membrane. Here, we have developed a mathematical model illustrating the possibility of interaction between two steady-state fluxes of negatively charged metabolites circulating across the VDAC in a membrane. The fluxes interact by contributing to generation of the membrane electrical potential with subsequent closure of the VDAC. The model predicts that the VDAC might function as a single-molecule biological transistor and amplifier, because according to the obtained calculations a small change in the flux of one pair of different negatively charged metabolites causes a significant modulation of a more powerful flux of another pair of negatively charged metabolites circulating across the same membrane with the VDAC. Such transistor-like behavior of the VDAC in the mitochondrial outer membrane might be an important principle of the cell energy metabolism regulation under some physiological conditions.
Keywords:Mathematical modeling  Membrane potential  Mitochondrial outer membrane  Voltage-dependent anion channel
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