Saltar al contenido principal

Escribe una PREreview

Membrane Potential: A Critical Reassessment of Pump Theory and an Electrostatic Adsorption Model

Publicada
Servidor
Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202603.0814.v1

The membrane pump theory (MPT) attributes the resting membrane potential of neurons to ionic diffusion driven by transmembrane concentration gradients, maintained by the Na,K-ATPase. Despite decades of dominance, this model harbours fundamental thermodynamic, kinetic, and geometric inconsistencies that have remained unaddressed in mainstream biophysics. We present a systematic quantitative critique across five independent axes: (1)~the electrostatic force exceeds the diffusive force by \sim300-fold under physiological conditions; (2)~the peri-axonal space contains 10--100×\times fewer ions than required by channel-based models; (3)~the Na,K-ATPase carries an energy deficit of \sim26\% per cycle and operates 5000×\times too slowly to compensate measured leak fluxes; (4)~the Nernst and Goldman--Hodgkin--Katz equations are applied outside their domain of validity; and (5)~cell geometry invalidates plane-membrane approximations. In contrast, direct experimental evidence (Tamagawa experiment) demonstrates that a potential of 40\approx -40\,mV arises from fixed negative charges alone, without any ionic gradient. We formalise this result within a Poisson--Boltzmann/Grahame electrostatic framework, supplemented by Ling's ion adsorption model and Manoj's murburn concept, and obtain Δψ65\Delta\psi \approx -65 to 85-85\,mV from first principles. Four specific experimental predictions distinguish the model from MPT.

Puedes escribir una PREreview de Membrane Potential: A Critical Reassessment of Pump Theory and an Electrostatic Adsorption Model. Una PREreview es una revisión de un preprint y puede variar desde unas pocas oraciones hasta un extenso informe, similar a un informe de revisión por pares organizado por una revista.

Antes de comenzar

Te pediremos que inicies sesión con tu ORCID iD. Si no tienes un iD, puedes crear uno.

¿Qué es un ORCID iD?

Un ORCID iD es un identificador único que te distingue de otros/as con tu mismo nombre o uno similar.

Comenzar ahora