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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Embryonic fibroblast motility and orientation can be influenced by physiological electric fields.

C A Erickson, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1984 - 
- Vol. 98, Iss: 1, pp 296-307
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TLDR
It is reported here that embryonic quail somite fibroblast motility can be strongly influenced by small DC electric fields, and it is believed that these field effects encompass a physiological range.
Abstract
Epithelial layers in developing embryos are known to drive ion currents through themselves that will, in turn, generate small electric fields within the embryo. We hypothesized that the movement of migratory embryonic cells might be guided by such fields, and report here that embryonic quail somite fibroblast motility can be strongly influenced by small DC electric fields. These cells responded to such fields in three ways: (a) The cells migrated towards the cathodal end of the field by extending lamellipodia in that direction. The threshold field strength for this galvanotaxis was between 1 and 10 mV/mm when the cells were cultured in plasma. (b) The cells oriented their long axes perpendicular to the field lines. The threshold field strength for this response for a 90-min interval in the field was 150 mV/mm in F12 medium and between 50 and 100 mV/mm in plasma. (c) The cells elongated under the influence of field strengths of 400 mV/mm and greater. These fibroblasts were therefore able to detect a voltage gradient at least as low as 0.2 mV across their width. Electric fields of at least 10-fold larger in magnitude than this threshold field have been detected in vivo in at least one vertebrate thus far, so we believe that these field effects encompass a physiological range.

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Cell Movement Is Guided by the Rigidity of the Substrate

TL;DR: It is discovered that changes in tissue rigidity and strain could play an important controlling role in a number of normal and pathological processes involving cell locomotion, including morphogenesis, the immune response, and wound healing.
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Electrical fields in wound healing-An overriding signal that directs cell migration.

TL;DR: Clinically, it is highly desirable to develop practical and reliable technologies for wound healing management exploiting the electric signaling, and genetic manipulation of PI3 kinase/Pten and integrin beta4 demonstrated the importance of those molecules.
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Electrical stimulation systems for cardiac tissue engineering.

TL;DR: A protocol for tissue engineering of synchronously contractile cardiac constructs by culturing cardiac cells with the application of pulsatile electrical fields designed to mimic those present in the native heart is described.
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The Responses of Cells to Electrical Fields: A Review

TL;DR: The significance of these recent results is increased by the finding that several cell types that normally migrate or grow long distances in embryos respond directionally to surprisingly small fields, and by the concurrent finding that developing embryos produce substantial endogenous currents.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Collagen substrata for studies on cell behavior.

TL;DR: The ways in which HCLs can be employed as both two- and three-dimensional substrata in cell behavioral studies are illustrated with some preliminary observations on the form, motility, adhesion, and growth of human diploid cells and two lines of malignant cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Analysis of Two-Dimensional Orientation Data

TL;DR: In this paper, a logical approach to the problem is to treat the distribution directly in its circular form rather than to divide it into a linear frequency distribution, which avoids the difficulty that the mean and standard deviation of such a distribution varies with the choice of origin or dividing point.
Journal ArticleDOI

Orientation of neurite growth by extracellular electric fields

TL;DR: This finding is consistent with the notion that cathodal accumulation of growth-controlling surface glycoproteins by the field is the underlying mechanism of the field-induced orientation of neurite growth toward the cathode.
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