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Aqueous Solutions, Membranes, Channels, and Pumps (Old paradigm) VERSUS Protoplasm, Fully-Extended Proteins, Structured

Aqueous Solutions, Membranes, Channels, and Pumps (Old paradigm) VERSUS Protoplasm, Fully-Extended Proteins, Structured Water, and Cardinal Adsorbents (New paradigm) A presentation of Dr. Gilbert Ling’s Association-Induction Hypothesis By Dr. John T. Zimmerman. Dr. Gilbert Ling’s

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Aqueous Solutions, Membranes, Channels, and Pumps (Old paradigm) VERSUS Protoplasm, Fully-Extended Proteins, Structured

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  1. Aqueous Solutions,Membranes, Channels, and Pumps (Old paradigm) VERSUS Protoplasm, Fully-Extended Proteins, Structured Water, and Cardinal Adsorbents (New paradigm) A presentation of Dr. Gilbert Ling’s Association-Induction Hypothesis By Dr. John T. Zimmerman

  2. Dr. Gilbert Ling’s Association-Induction Hypothesis explains: 1) Cell volume control (osmosis) 2) The differential outside/inside solute concentrations of potassium and sodium ions (potassium inside, sodium outside) 3) “Semipermeable membranes” (more permeable to potassium ions than to sodium ions) 4) The cellular resting potential difference (-70 mV inside)

  3. This lecture is about a novel and extremely important hypothesis of the living states (they're two of them) at both the cellular and below-cell level called the Association-Induction Hypothesis developed by Dr. Gilbert Ling.

  4. The ASSOCIATION aspect of the Association-Induction Hypothesis refers to the association between water molecules and the carbonyl (CO-) and imino (NH+) ends of amino acid residues in polypeptide chains. It also refers to the association of potassium ions with alpha and gamma carboxyl (COOH-) groups on the protein chains as well.

  5. The INDUCTION aspect of the Association-Induction Hypothesis refers to ability of certain molecules to INDUCE a change in the density of the electron cloud surrounding certain charged ions on the polypeptide chain and to have that change propagated along a string of about 1,042 molecules long.

  6. Living cells contain a large amount of water, making up some 80% of the cell's weight, though it could be as low as 50% and as high as 90%. The rest of the cell consists mostly of giant proteins molecules (and in much smaller amounts , the nucleic acids, DNA or RNA, and carbohydrates like glycogen).

  7. It is the nature and amounts of the cell proteins that determine the characteristics of living cells. In turn the nature of the proteins is dictated by the genetic information carried in DNA and RNA. The cell also contains an assortment of small molecules and ions. Some of these small molecules and ions like ATP are vital to life.

  8. When a salt dissolves in water, it splits into two oppositely charged particles or ions, the positively-charged ion is called a CATION and the negatively-charged ion is called an ANION.

  9. Most living cells spend their lives in a salt-watery environment. When common salt, or sodium chloride, dissolves in water, the ionically-bonded molecule splits into two charged particles or ions, positively charged sodium ions (Na+) and negatively charged chloride ions (Cl-).

  10. In the process of dissolution, these ions take up a more or less permanent coat of strongly-bound water molecules and are then referred to as hydrated sodium ions and hydrated chloride ions.

  11. The sodium-ion concentration in most living cells is low, equal to about one tenth of that in the fluid outside the cell. In contrast, another univalent positively charged cation, the potassium ion, though chemically very similar to the sodium ion, distributes itself in such a way that its concentration inside the cells is some forty times higher than in the surrounding medium (interstitial fluid).

  12. The asymmetries in the distribution of the sodium ions (10X greater outside concentration) and the potassium ions (40X greater inside concentration) are found in virtually all living cells.

  13. How does the cell physiologist explain this unusual pattern of distribution of the potassium and sodium ions? The mechanisms offered by the membrane-pump theory and the association-induction hypothesis are profoundly different.

  14. In the membrane-pump theory, a living cell represents essentially a bag-full of a water, an aqueous solution of proteins, a lot of potassium ions, a few sodium ions, and other dissolved substances in an aqueous solution.

  15. With the membrane-pump theory, the water inside the cell shows no major difference from normal liquid water bathing the cells. Nor are the small and large molecules and ions inside the cell markedly different from similar substances dissolved in normal liquid water.

  16. With the membrane-pump theory, cell proteins SUSPENDED in this normal liquid cell water are themselves in their so-called NATIVE STATE (a misnomer) that is, a stable, and reproducible state, which a protein assumes reproducibly in vitro when purified by certain standard technical procedures and dissolved in water.

  17. However, this so-called NATIVE STATE (a misnomer) is NOT the normal, natural state of proteins found in living cells, particularly cells in the cooperative RESTING living state.

  18. In the membrane-pump theory, an all-important but very thin membrane, called the CELL MEMBRANE or PLASMA MEMBRANE encloses this bag of watery solution. In the membrane pump theory, it is this very thin membrane which determines the chemical makeup and ionic distribution (potassium more in the inside, sodium more on the outside) of the cell.

  19. The cell membrane accomplishes these tasks by virtue of postulated critical diameters of rigid membrane pores (or CHANNELS), which admit small molecules and ions but bar larger ones and by the ceaseless inward or outward transportation of ions by a postulated energy-consuming SODIUM-POTASSIUM PUMP located in the cell membrane.

  20. Then there are also pumps for the different sugars, for the many different (free) amino acids , many different positively charged as well as negatively charged ions etc. (For a partial list of the names of membrane pumps postulated up to 1973, see Table 2 in Ling et al, Annals of New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 204, pp.6-50, 1973).

  21. Now we turn to the alternative theory, the ASSOCIATION-INDUCTION HYPOTHESIS developed by Dr. Gilbert Ling.

  22. Everybody knows what some raw hamburger feels like in your hands. From its rich water content, raw hamburger feels wet and moist. Yet it is also quite different from a wet sponge. Squeeze a wet sponge and water comes out. Squeeze harder, more water comes out until finally the sponge becomes almost dry.

  23. If instead, you take some raw hamburger and try to squeeze the water out from this water-rich protein material, you will find that it is well nigh impossible to squeeze any water out even after the meat has been chopped into tiny pieces. Even after spinning protein in a centrifuge at 1,000 times the force of gravity for 4 minutes, water still remains in chopped-up muscle cells.

  24. So this exceedingly simple experiment comprises the first evidence showing, without ambiguity, that the basic tenet of free water in the membrane-pump theory is wrong. The cell water cannot be normal liquid water. Were the cell water truly normal liquid water, it would have been extracted by squeezing or even more so by centrifugation.

  25. What should remain in squeezed hamburger or centrifuged muscle fragments should be nothing more than dried proteins like a fully-squeezed out sponge. But that does not happen while the cells are still alive or close to being alive as in fresh hamburger.

  26. Our next question is to find out how water (making up some 80% of the weight of the fresh muscle (as well as other cells) can be held so tenaciously inside the cell, resisting centrifugation at 1,000-times gravity. Since the cell is primarily water and proteins, one naturally seeks an explanation in terms of the interaction between the more mobile water molecules and the more fixed proteins.

  27. Theoretically speaking, all proteins have the potential of reacting with a large amount of water. In reality, only some proteins interact with a large amount of water "permanently.“ One familiar water-retaining protein is gelatin, the major ingredient of the powdered material that comes in Jell-O packets.

  28. Jell-O is almost all water and yet in Jell-O, water can "stand up" as no normal pure liquid water ever can. This ability of the water in Jell-O to stand up against gravity, which ice can also, indicates that the water-to-water interaction in the Jell-O water has been altered by the only other component present, gelatin. Why and how is this possible?

  29. First, what is gelatin? Gelatin is a product of "cooked" animal skin, hoof, horn, etc. The main source material of gelatin from these animal parts is the protein known as collagen, the major protein component of our tendons and skin.

  30. That gelatin is an unusual protein has been known for a long time. Thus the term COLLOID is its namesake. It is the association-induction hypothesis, which for the first time, offered an explanation for the uniqueness of gelatin (as well as colloids) and the "living substance" or protoplasm.

  31. Proteins are long chain molecules. However, unlike ordinary chains where each link is just like another link, the proteins are chains of some twenty different kinds of links, called amino-acid residues which are amino acids in a "joint" form. So in a way, the language of life is spelled out not in a linear array of 26 alphabetic characters but in a linear array of 20 some amino-acid residues.

  32. Each amino-acid component of the protein (a long string of amino acid residues) offers a pair of electrically charged or polar groups between amino acids in the protein chain, a negatively charged carbonyl oxygen (CO-) carrying a "lone pair" of (negatively charged) electrons and a positively-charged imino (NH+) H atom, which is lacking in one electron.

  33. In most proteins, each CO- group is joined (or hydrogen-bonded, or H-bonded) to the H+ atom of the NH+ group of the third amino acid down the chain. In this way, the protein chains assumes what is known as the alpha-helix structure. Both the polar NH+ and CO- groups also have affinity for water molecules. The O end of the H2O water molecule can adsorb onto the protein's NH+ site; the H ends of the H2O water molecules adsorb on to the O atom of the protein's CO- site.

  34. However, in most proteins in their so-called native state, the NH+ and CO- groups are joined together intra-molecularly via H-bonds just mentioned. Thus joined, they are unable to interact with water. However, as first pointed out by Ling in 1978, a large portion of the gelatin chain cannot fold into the alpha-helical folds because 54% of the amino acid residues making up gelatin are either unable (proline, hydroxyproline) or disinclined (glycine) to assume the alpha-helical structure.

  35. Accordingly, a large portion of the gelatin protein molecules remains permanently in the fully-extended conformation just like the proteins in a living cell. In this fully-extended conformation, the polar CO- and NH+ groups are exactly properly spaced and directly exposed to and they are free to interact with, not just one layer, but multiple layers of water molecules.

  36. Water so polarized endows gelatin with many of its unusual properties, which it shares with living cells. This is then the essence of what has been known as the Polarized Multilayer Theory of Cell Water first introduced by Ling in 1965.

  37. Parenthetically, by multiple layers, of water this means no more than a few layers (5, 6, or 7 layers of stacked-up water molecules) on each protein chain (and there are hundreds of such protein chains in a typical cell). Stacking 5 to 7 layers of water molecules on top of one another would be quite adequate to account for all of the intercellular water existing in the dynamic structure of polarized multilayers as proposed by the AI Hypothesis.

  38. Since then, it has been fully established that gelatin as well as similar long chain organic molecules or polymers that can maintain a linear chain of fully-extended proteins, which happen to have the properly spaced CO- and NH+ polar groups will behave like gelatin and like the protoplasm of living cells.

  39. Water in all these model systems and in the living cell shares the property of maintaining, at a lower concentration, those molecules and hydrated ions found at low levels in most living cells. The most outstanding is the sodium ion (lower on the inside than the outside of the cell by a factor of 10).

  40. In summary, according to the association-induction hypothesis all or virtually all the water in living cells assumes the dynamic structure of polarized multilayers. Water assuming this dynamic structure endows the living cells with many attributes which had hitherto been assigned to other (incorrect) causes.

  41. Among these attributes is that of maintaining a low concentration of large (hydrated) ions like sodium, sugars, and free amino acids. An underlying assumption is that some of the cell proteins exist in the fully-extended conformation even though, unlike gelatin, these proteins do so only conditionally (in the cooperative RESTING living state) rather than permanently.

  42. In other words, they do so only when the cells are ALIVE. What do we mean by being alive? We will go on to that subject next. It bears mentioning that the membrane-pump theory has not been able to produce an answer to this simple but basic question yet.

  43. The major ingredients of living cells are proteins, water, small molecules, some large molecules like DNA and ions (sodium, potassium, and chloride). In the conventional membrane-pump theory, all these ingredients exist as part of a DILUTE AQUEOUS SOLUTION.

  44. In contrast, according to the association induction hypothesis, proteins, water, and much of the small molecules and ions are closely ASSOCIATED or bonded together and maintain themselves in a high-(negative) energy and a highly-ordered or low-entropy state called the cooperative RESTINGliving state. A cell maintained at its cooperative RESTING living state is ALIVE.

  45. Most individuals know that matter exists in three different states: a gas, a liquid, or a solid. Water, therefore, exists as gaseous water (water vapor) liquid water, or solid water (ice).

  46. However, the liquid water state has two different sub-states: unstructured (as in normal liquid water) and structured (as found inside the cell). The multilayered structured water is due to adsorption of the water molecules to the carbonyl (CO-) and imino (NH+) polypeptide bonds.

  47. Thus structured water (inside of a cell) can be considered as a state of water somewhere in between normal liquid water and ice. Water inside cells is somewhat structured. But water in the solid state is totally structured.

  48. Now water and ice comprise the same water molecules represented as H2O. As mentioned before, these molecules exist in different physical states, which we call respectively the liquid state and the solid state.

  49. Note that each of these states specifies the relationship between individual H2O molecules in characteristic space and time coordinates. In ice, water molecules are rigidly fixed in space and move relatively little in time. Water molecules in liquid water are much more mobile and move about more freely with time.

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