Dissipation During the Gating Cycle of the Bacterial Mechanosensitive Ion Channel Approaches the Landauer’s Limit
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Abstract
The Landauer’s principle sets a thermodynamic bound of k B T ln 2 on the energetic cost of erasing each bit of information. It holds for any memory device, regardless of its physical implementation. It was recently shown that carefully built artificial devices can saturate this bound. In contrast, biological computation-like processes, e.g., DNA replication, transcription and translation use an order of magnitude more than their Landauer’s minimum. Here we show that saturating the Landauer bound is nevertheless possible with biological devices. This is done using a mechanosensitive channel of small conductance (MscS) from E. coli as a memory bit. MscS is a fast-acting osmolyte release valve adjusting turgor pressure inside the cell. Our patch-clamp experiments and data analysis demonstrate that under a slow switching regime, the heat dissipation in the course of tension-driven gating transitions in MscS closely approaches its Landauer’s limit. We discuss the biological implications of this physical trait.
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