Article
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Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed
Sensing Magnetic Fields With Magnetosensitive Ion Channels
Version 1
: Received: 25 January 2018 / Approved: 26 January 2018 / Online: 26 January 2018 (05:11:59 CET)
A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.
Goychuk, I. Sensing Magnetic Fields with Magnetosensitive Ion Channels. Sensors 2018, 18, 728. Goychuk, I. Sensing Magnetic Fields with Magnetosensitive Ion Channels. Sensors 2018, 18, 728.
Abstract
Magnetic nanoparticles are met across many biological species ranging from magnetosensitive bacteria, fishes, bees, bats, rats, birds, to humans. They can be both of biogenetic origin and due to environmental contamination, being either in paramagnetic or ferromagnetic state. The energy of such naturally occurring single-domain magnetic nanoparticles can reach up to 10-20 room kBT in the magnetic field of the Earth, which naturally led to supposition that they can serve as sensory elements in various animals. This work explores within a stochastic modeling framework a fascinating hypothesis of magnetosensitive ion channels with magnetic nanoparticles serving as sensory elements, especially, how realistic it is given a highly dissipative viscoelastic interior of living cells and typical sizes of nanoparticles possibly involved.
Keywords
magnetic nanoparticles; ion channels; viscoelastic effects and anomalous diffusion; non-exponential statistics; influence of weak magnetic fields on living systems
Subject
Physical Sciences, Particle and Field Physics
Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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