We present a general and systematic theory of non-equilibrium dynamics of
multi-component fluid membranes, in general, and membranes containing
transmembrane proteins, in particular. Developed based on a minimal number of
principles of statistical physics and designed to be a meso/macroscopic-scale
effective description, the theory is formulated in terms of a set of equations
of hydrodynamics and linear constitutive relations. As a particular emphasis of
the theory, the equations and the constitutive relations address both the
thermodynamic and the hydrodynamic consequences of the unconventional material
characteristics of lipid-protein membranes and contain proposals as well as
predictions which have not yet been made in already existed work on membrane
hydrodynamics and which may have experimental relevance. The framework
structure of the theory makes possible its applications to a range of
non-equilibrium phenomena in a range of membrane systems, as discussions in the
paper of a few limit cases demonstrate.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, minor changes and addition