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Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses

Electroporation—a transient electric-field-induced increase in cell membrane permeability—can be used to facilitate the delivery of anticancer drugs for antitumour electrochemotherapy. In recent years, Ca(2+) electroporation has emerged as an alternative modality to electrochemotherapy. The antitumo...

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Autores principales: Navickaite, Diana, Ruzgys, Paulius, Novickij, Vitalij, Jakutaviciute, Milda, Maciulevicius, Martynas, Sinceviciute, Ruta, Satkauskas, Saulius
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7285190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32375426
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12050422
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author Navickaite, Diana
Ruzgys, Paulius
Novickij, Vitalij
Jakutaviciute, Milda
Maciulevicius, Martynas
Sinceviciute, Ruta
Satkauskas, Saulius
author_facet Navickaite, Diana
Ruzgys, Paulius
Novickij, Vitalij
Jakutaviciute, Milda
Maciulevicius, Martynas
Sinceviciute, Ruta
Satkauskas, Saulius
author_sort Navickaite, Diana
collection PubMed
description Electroporation—a transient electric-field-induced increase in cell membrane permeability—can be used to facilitate the delivery of anticancer drugs for antitumour electrochemotherapy. In recent years, Ca(2+) electroporation has emerged as an alternative modality to electrochemotherapy. The antitumor effect of calcium electroporation is achieved as a result of the introduction of supraphysiological calcium doses. However, calcium is also known to play a key role in membrane resealing, potentially altering the pore dynamics and molecular delivery during electroporation. To elucidate the role of calcium for the electrotransfer of small charged molecule into cell we have performed experiments using nano- and micro-second electric pulses. The results demonstrate that extracellular calcium ions inhibit the electrotransfer of small charged molecules. Experiments revealed that this effect is related to an increased rate of membrane resealing. We also employed mathematical modelling methods in order to explain the differences between the CaCl(2) effects after the application of nano- and micro-second duration electric pulses. Simulation showed that these differences occur due to the changes in transmembrane voltage generation in response to the increase in specific conductivity when CaCl(2) concentration is increased.
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spelling pubmed-72851902020-06-18 Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses Navickaite, Diana Ruzgys, Paulius Novickij, Vitalij Jakutaviciute, Milda Maciulevicius, Martynas Sinceviciute, Ruta Satkauskas, Saulius Pharmaceutics Article Electroporation—a transient electric-field-induced increase in cell membrane permeability—can be used to facilitate the delivery of anticancer drugs for antitumour electrochemotherapy. In recent years, Ca(2+) electroporation has emerged as an alternative modality to electrochemotherapy. The antitumor effect of calcium electroporation is achieved as a result of the introduction of supraphysiological calcium doses. However, calcium is also known to play a key role in membrane resealing, potentially altering the pore dynamics and molecular delivery during electroporation. To elucidate the role of calcium for the electrotransfer of small charged molecule into cell we have performed experiments using nano- and micro-second electric pulses. The results demonstrate that extracellular calcium ions inhibit the electrotransfer of small charged molecules. Experiments revealed that this effect is related to an increased rate of membrane resealing. We also employed mathematical modelling methods in order to explain the differences between the CaCl(2) effects after the application of nano- and micro-second duration electric pulses. Simulation showed that these differences occur due to the changes in transmembrane voltage generation in response to the increase in specific conductivity when CaCl(2) concentration is increased. MDPI 2020-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7285190/ /pubmed/32375426 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12050422 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Navickaite, Diana
Ruzgys, Paulius
Novickij, Vitalij
Jakutaviciute, Milda
Maciulevicius, Martynas
Sinceviciute, Ruta
Satkauskas, Saulius
Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title_full Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title_fullStr Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title_full_unstemmed Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title_short Extracellular-Ca(2+)-Induced Decrease in Small Molecule Electrotransfer Efficiency: Comparison between Microsecond and Nanosecond Electric Pulses
title_sort extracellular-ca(2+)-induced decrease in small molecule electrotransfer efficiency: comparison between microsecond and nanosecond electric pulses
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7285190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32375426
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics12050422
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