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Published September 4, 2025 | Version 2
Preprint Open

Mechanically-Gated Quantum-to-Classical Transduction in Neuronal Microtubules: A Theoretical Framework for Neuromelanin Accumulation

Description

Neuromelanin accumulation in catecholaminergic neurons represents a hallmark of aging that paradoxically correlates with neuronal vulnerability in Parkinson’s disease. We present an integrative theoretical framework linking quantum coherent processes in microtubules to neuromelanin synthesis through mechanically-gated photon escape. Recent quantitative evidence demonstrates that mechanosensory tubulin isotypes form “soft” lattices with lateral bond strengths of 0.02 kBT, enabling spontaneous gap formation up to 80 nm under physiological forces. We propose that: (1) tryptophan arrays within microtubule lumens support superradiant UV emission; (2) mechanical “breathing” of soft lattices creates escape routes for these photons; (3) escaped UV catalyzes proximity-based catecholamine polymerization. This mechanism predicts neuromelanin accumulation in neurons experiencing high mechanical stress (nodes of Ranvier, unmyelinated axons) and expressing soft tubulin isotypes. Recent findings of early locus coeruleus axon degeneration preceding neuromelanin-rich cell body loss, calcium-dependent phosphatidylserine externalization, and activity-driven neurodegeneration support this framework. We present testable predictions linking microtubule mechanics, quantum processes, and selective neuronal vulnerability in neurodegenerative disease.

Notes

This preprint advances a speculative but mechanistically testable hypothesis about neuromelanin biogenesis, integrating discoveries from microtubule mechanics and quantum biology. It is intended as a theoretical contribution to ongoing debates about the function and pathology of neuromelanin, and may serve as a starting point for experimental investigations.

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Additional details

Related works

Cites
Journal article: 10.1038/s41567-025-02983-w (DOI)
Publication: 10.7554/eLife.98775 (DOI)
Publication: 10.1038/s43587-025-00940-z (DOI)

Dates

Submitted
2025-08-30
Research Proposal
Updated
2025-09-04
Update to v2 to include new findings