Ja. Brown et Ja. Tuszynski, DIPOLE INTERACTIONS IN AXONAL MICROTUBULES AS A MECHANISM OF SIGNAL PROPAGATION, Physical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics, 56(5), 1997, pp. 5834-5840
The microtubules (MTs) of nerve cells are stable relative to their cou
nterparts in the rest of the body. This stability allows them to parti
cipate in cellular signaling processes. Each of the MT's subunits, dim
ers of tubulin protein, has an electric dipole moment that contributes
to the overall polarity of the structure. We propose that the orienta
tion of the individual dipoles may be flipped due to a conformational
change of the tubulin dimer if energy is supplied through guanosine tr
i-phosphate hydrolysis or via physical interactions. Thus the MT latti
ce may be viewed as an electric dipole lattice with some overall polar
ization upon which signals, in the form of dipole patterns, may be pro
pagated through dipole interactions that induce conformational changes
. As a nerve impulse propagates along a neuron (nerve cell), the neuro
nal MTs are subjected to a large transient electric field that interac
ts with the MT lattices. Based on the recent conjecture of information
processing and/or energy transport by MTs, we have used a Monte Carlo
technique to model the interactions between the MT's subunits and to
investigate the response of the lattice to nerve impulses. Our model o
f these interactions addresses the problem of thermal fluctuations in
the dipole lattice and demonstrates how the nerve impulse may cause a
signal to propagate along the MTs within the axon.