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Autores principales: Nishide, Ryosuke, Kaneko, Kunihiko
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2026
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.16171
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author Nishide, Ryosuke
Kaneko, Kunihiko
author_facet Nishide, Ryosuke
Kaneko, Kunihiko
contents Directional ion transport across membranes maintains living systems in nonequilibrium, which underlies chemiosmotic energy conversion. However, the physical origin of collectively organized ion transport in primitive cellular systems remains unclear. Here, we propose a minimal model in which ion pumps collectively align through feedback between ion transport and electrostatic interactions. In the model, directional ion transport generates a membrane potential, while the resulting electrochemical potential biases pump orientation, leading to self-organized collective alignment. Numerical simulations and mean-field analysis reveal a nonequilibrium transition from a disordered state without net transport to a pump-alignment state with sustained membrane potentials. The critical behavior is consistent with the mean-field Ising universality class; however, the effective field is generated self-consistently by nonequilibrium ion transport. We further show that protocell asymmetry can bias the polarity of the membrane potential. These results provide a generic self-organizing mechanism for the emergence of bioelectricity and a physical route toward chemiosmotic coupling in protocells.
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Self-Organized Bioelectricity via Collective Pump Alignment: Toward a Physical Origin of Chemiosmosis
Nishide, Ryosuke
Kaneko, Kunihiko
Biological Physics
Directional ion transport across membranes maintains living systems in nonequilibrium, which underlies chemiosmotic energy conversion. However, the physical origin of collectively organized ion transport in primitive cellular systems remains unclear. Here, we propose a minimal model in which ion pumps collectively align through feedback between ion transport and electrostatic interactions. In the model, directional ion transport generates a membrane potential, while the resulting electrochemical potential biases pump orientation, leading to self-organized collective alignment. Numerical simulations and mean-field analysis reveal a nonequilibrium transition from a disordered state without net transport to a pump-alignment state with sustained membrane potentials. The critical behavior is consistent with the mean-field Ising universality class; however, the effective field is generated self-consistently by nonequilibrium ion transport. We further show that protocell asymmetry can bias the polarity of the membrane potential. These results provide a generic self-organizing mechanism for the emergence of bioelectricity and a physical route toward chemiosmotic coupling in protocells.
title Self-Organized Bioelectricity via Collective Pump Alignment: Toward a Physical Origin of Chemiosmosis
topic Biological Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.16171