@mleighton.bsky.social
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fqxi.org
FQxI @fqxi.org · 12d
Johann du Buisson, Jannik Ehrich, mleighton.bsky.social, davidasivak.bsky.social, and John Bechhoefer introduce a one-coordinate test that infers heat flow to flag “demonic” operation. In kinesin simulations tuned to experiments, the motor grows more demon-like as active fluctuations rise.
Reposted
qiweiyu.bsky.social
Our recent work (elifesciences.org/articles/104...) combines theory and experiments (by Alex Papagiannakis and Christine Jacobs-Wagner) to understand how chromosome segregation is coupled to growth in E coli. We demonstrate that the nonequilibrium dynamics of polysomes may play a key role.
mleighton.bsky.social
Thanks to NSERC, the Canada Research Chairs program, and @sfuphysics.bsky.social for supporting our research! Special thanks to @mitacscanada.bsky.social for funding Julian’s time as a visiting researcher in the Sivak Group last Summer.
mleighton.bsky.social
Over the voltage range typical of a neuronal action potential, at low voltages the pump exhibits Maxwell-demon behavior and high efficiency, while at high voltages the pump instead operates as a conventional engine and achieves higher turnover at the cost of lower efficiency.
mleighton.bsky.social
Remarkably, we find that sodium-potassium pumps can exhibit Maxwell-demon behavior, supporting internal information flow that enables the ion-transporting subsystem to leverage thermal fluctuations to produce useful electrochemical work.
mleighton.bsky.social
We study sodium potassium pumps through the lens of bipartite stochastic thermodynamics, identifying and computing energy and information flows between the ATP-consuming and ion-transporting parts of these machines.
mleighton.bsky.social
These pumps are nanoscale molecular machines that consume chemical energy to transport ions across membranes into, out of, and within cells. They are essential both for maintaining cellular homeostasis, and for propagating electrical signals in neurons.
mleighton.bsky.social
New preprint out today: “Information Thermodynamics of Cellular Ion Pumps”. Led by talented undergraduate student Julián Jiménez-Paz, and working with @davidasivak.bsky.social, we explore the thermodynamics of cellular ion pumps like the sodium-potassium pump.

arxiv.org/abs/2506.11248
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davidasivak.bsky.social
Canada Excellence Research Chairs offer $4-8M over eight years to build a world-class research focus.
mleighton.bsky.social
Interested in coarse-graining, irreversibility, or neural activity in the hippocampus?

If so, check out our new preprint exploring how maximizing the irreversibility preserved from microscopic dynamics leads to interpretable coarse-grained descriptions of biological systems!
chriswlynn.bsky.social
Biology consumes energy at the microscale to power functions across all scales: From proteins and cells to entire populations of animals.

Led by @qiweiyu.bsky.social‬ and @mleighton.bsky.social‬, we study how coarse-graining can help to bridge this gap 👇🧵

arxiv.org/abs/2506.01909
Reposted
davidasivak.bsky.social
Postdoc opportunity!
Join us in heavenly Vancouver (Canada) to develop fundamental nonequilibrium stat mech, thermo, and info theory applied to biomolecular machines and in close collaboration with experiment.
Details: www.sfu.ca/physics/siva...
Postdoc Ad
www.sfu.ca
mleighton.bsky.social
We explore the free energy transduction strategies used by various evolved biological molecular machines in different contexts, and suggest possible design principles we might learn from them to help guide the engineering of synthetic nanomachines.
mleighton.bsky.social
We focus on flows of energy and information between the components of biological machines, and highlight several possible engine configurations. One intriguing example: an “information engine” mode where one subsystem uses information to harvest heat energy from its environment.
mleighton.bsky.social
Now out in @annualreviews.bsky.social of Physical Chemistry: @davidasivak.bsky.social and I review recent work studying flows of free energy into, out of, and within molecular machines. These nanoscale protein machines convert energy within cells of all living organisms with remarkable efficiencies.