“…The voltage dependence of eukaryotic porins from a variety of eukaryotic organisms was investigated in detail in many studies: Paramecium ( Schein et al, 1976 ; Doring and Colombini, 1984 ; Ludwig et al, 1989 ); Mammals: rat ( Roos et al, 1982 ; Colombini, 1983 ; Ludwig et al, 1986 ), rabbit ( De Pinto et al, 1987a ), bovine ( De Pinto et al, 1987a ), pig ( De Pinto et al, 1987a ), and human brain ( Bureau et al, 1992 ); Fish: Anguilla anguilla ( De Pinto et al, 1991c ); Plants: potato ( Heins et al, 1994 ; Lopes-Rodrigues et al, 2020 ), pea ( Fischer et al, 1994 ), corn ( Smack and Colombini, 1985 ; Aljamal et al, 1993 ; Fischer et al, 1994 ), wheat ( Blumenthal et al, 1993 ), and pea root plastid porin ( Fischer et al, 1994 ; Popp et al, 1997 ); Other organisms: Neurospora crassa ( Freitag et al, 1982c ), yeast ( Ludwig et al, 1988 ), and Dictyostelium ( Troll et al, 1992 ); and Flies: Protophormia ( Wiesner et al, 1996 ) and Drosophila ( De Pinto et al, 1989a ; Aiello et al, 2004 ; Komarov et al, 2004 ). Common to all of these studies is that the eukaryotic porins of all these eukaryotes formed high-conducting channels in reconstituted systems.…”