membranism
Membranism is a theoretical framework in biology that emphasizes the primacy of cellular membranes in organizing life. Proponents argue that membranes—through their lipid composition, selective permeability, membrane potential, and the spatial arrangement of membrane proteins—act as the central drivers of cellular identity, signaling, metabolism, and development, with genetic information playing a supporting or modulatory role. The viewpoint treats membranes not merely as barriers but as dynamic platforms that shape biochemical pathways and emergent properties of cells and tissues.
Etymology and scope: The term derives from membrane and the suffix -ism, denoting a theory or approach.
Core ideas: Membrane composition and asymmetry influence signaling networks and metabolic flux; electrochemical gradients across membranes
Reception and critique: Critics caution that membrane-centric explanations must still account for genetic and intracellular regulatory
Applications: In origin-of-life research, synthetic biology, and biomimetic engineering, membranism informs the design of artificial cells,