Enhancement of proliferation activity of mammalian cells by intense burst sinusoidal electric fields

2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 331-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Yano ◽  
K. Abe ◽  
H. Akiyama ◽  
S. Katsuki
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Gary Thompson ◽  
Hope Beier ◽  
Bennett Ibey

Above a threshold electric field strength, 600 ns-duration pulsed electric field (nsPEF) exposure substantially porates and permeabilizes cellular plasma membranes in aqueous solution to many small ions. Repetitive exposures increase permeabilization to calcium ions (Ca2+) in a dosage-dependent manner. Such exposure conditions can create relatively long-lived pores that reseal after passive lateral diffusion of lipids should have closed the pores. One explanation for eventual pore resealing is active membrane repair, and an ubiquitous repair mechanism in mammalian cells is lysosome exocytosis. A previous study shows that intracellular lysosome movement halts upon a 16.2 kV/cm, 600-ns PEF exposure of a single train of 20 pulses at 5 Hz. In that study, lysosome stagnation qualitatively correlates with the presence of Ca2+ in the extracellular solution and with microtubule collapse. The present study tests the hypothesis that limitation of nsPEF-induced Ca2+ influx and colloid osmotic cell swelling permits unabated lysosome translocation in exposed cells. The results indicate that the efforts used herein to preclude Ca2+ influx and colloid osmotic swelling following nsPEF exposure did not prevent attenuation of lysosome translocation. Intracellular lysosome movement is inhibited by nsPEF exposure(s) in the presence of PEG 300-containing solution or by 20 pulses of nsPEF in the presence of extracellular calcium. The only cases with no significant decreases in lysosome movement are the sham and exposure to a single nsPEF in Ca2+-free solution.


Author(s):  
M. Yano ◽  
C. Matsumoto ◽  
N. Tanaka ◽  
T. Oide ◽  
K. Abe ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
N. Nomura ◽  
Y. Yamamoto ◽  
R. Hayashi ◽  
K. Uto ◽  
S. Katsuki ◽  
...  

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 1578
Author(s):  
Chenang Lyu ◽  
Leo Lou ◽  
Matthew J. Powell-Palm ◽  
Gideon Ukpai ◽  
Xing Li ◽  
...  

Porous dielectric membranes that perform insulator-based dielectrophoresis or electroosmotic pumping are commonly used in microchip technologies. However, there are few fundamental studies on the electrokinetic flow patterns of single microparticles around a single micropore in a thin dielectric film. Such a study would provide fundamental insights into the electrokinetic phenomena around a micropore, with practical applications regarding the manipulation of single cells and microparticles by focused electric fields. We have fabricated a device around a silicon nitride film with a single micropore (2–4 µm in diameter) which has the ability to locally focus electric fields on the micropore. Single microscale polystyrene beads were used to study the electrokinetic flow patterns. A mathematical model was developed to support the experimental study and evaluate the electric field distribution, fluid motion, and bead trajectories. Good agreement was found between the mathematic model and the experimental data. We show that the combination of electroosmotic flow and dielectrophoretic force induced by direct current through a single micropore can be used to trap, agglomerate, and repel microparticles around a single micropore without an external pump. The scale of our system is practically relevant for the manipulation of single mammalian cells, and we anticipate that our single-micropore approach will be directly employable in applications ranging from fundamental single cell analyses to high-precision single cell electroporation or cell fusion.


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