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Journal ArticleDOI

Reversible electrical breakdown of lipid bilayer membranes: a charge-pulse relaxation study.

Roland Benz, +2 more
- 16 Jul 1979 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 2, pp 181-204
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TLDR
Charge-pulse experiments were performed with lipid bilayer membranes from oxidized cholesterol/n-decane at relatively high voltages at relatively low voltages, where the membranes show an irreversible mechanical rupture if the membrane is charged to voltages on the order of 300 mV, which is correlated with the reversible electrical breakdown of the lipid bilayers membrane.
Abstract
Charge-pulse experiments were performed with lipid bilayer membranes from oxidized cholesterol/n-decane at relatively high voltages (several hundred mV). The membranes show an irreversible mechanical rupture if the membrane is charged to voltages on the order of 300 mV. In the case of the mechanical rupture, the voltage across the membrane needs about 50–200 μsec to decay completely to zero. At much higher voltages, applied to the membrane by charge pulses of about 500 nsec duration, a decrease of the specific resistance of the membranes by nine orders of magnitude is observed (from 108 to 0.1 Ω cm2), which is correlated with the reversible electrical breakdown of the lipid bilayer membrane. Due to the high conductance increase (breakdown) of the bilayer it is not possible to charge the membrane to a larger value than the critical potential differenceV c. For 1m alkali ion chloridesV c was about 1 V. The temperature dependence of the electrical breakdown voltageV c is comparable to that being observed with cell membranes.V c decreases between 2 and 48°C from 1.5 to 0.6 V in the presence of 1m KCl. Breakdown experiments were also performed with lipid bilayer membranes composed of other lipids. The fast decay of the voltage (current) in the 100-nsec range after application of a charge pulse was very similar in these experiments compared with experiments with membranes made from oxidized cholesterol. However, the membranes made from other lipids show a mechanical breakdown after the electrical breakdown, whereas with one single membrane from oxidized cholesterol more than twenty reproducible breakdown experiments could be repeated without a visible disturbance of the membrane stability. The reversible electrical breakdown of the membrane is discussed in terms of both compression of the membrane (electromechanical model) and ion movement through the membrane induced by high electric field strength (Born energy).

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Citations
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Theory of electroporation: A review

TL;DR: This review of the essential features of theoretical models of electroporation focuses on transient aqueous pore models, which can account for key features of mechanical instability and dramatic reversible electrical behavior of certain planar membranes and of cell membranes, and some features of molecular transport.
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Electroporation of cell membranes.

TL;DR: Electroporation has found applications in introduction of plasmids or foreign DNA into living cells for gene transfections, fusion of cells to prepare heterokaryons, hybridoma, hybrid embryos, and constructing animal model by fusing human cells with animal tissues.
Book ChapterDOI

Electrical breakdown, electropermeabilization and electrofusion

TL;DR: The techniques for electrical breakdown, electropermeabilization and electrofusion could be an important tool in this process, since the high electrical fields occurring naturally in the membrane play an important role in the selective transport of substances across the membrane as well as in natural regulatory processes.
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Electroporation: A general phenomenon for manipulating cells and tissues

TL;DR: Electroporation of isolated cells has also been used for introduction of enzymes, antibodies, and other biochemical reagents for intracellular assays, and more recently, tissue electroporation has begun to be explored, with potential applications including enhanced cancer tumor chemotherapy, gene therapy, transdermal drug delivery, and noninvasive sampling for biochemical measurement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Currents carried by sodium and potassium ions through the membrane of the giant axon of Loligo

TL;DR: The identity of the ions which carry the various phases of the membrane current is chiefly concerned with sodium ions, since there is much evidence that the rising phase of the action potential is caused by the entry of these ions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of Bimolecular Membranes from Lipid Monolayers and a Study of Their Electrical Properties

TL;DR: There is a significant difference between the capacity of bilayers made from mono-layers and that of hydrocarbon-containing bilayer made by phase transition; the average values are 0.9 and 0.45 muF cm(-2), respectively, which approximates that of biological membranes.
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Chromatographically homogeneous lecithin from egg phospholipids.

TL;DR: The modified method involved application of crude egg phosphatides to a column of alumina in the proportion of 1 g phosphatide/25 g alumina, and elution of the lecithin fraction with the 2-component solvent system chloroform:methanol, 9:1 by vol.
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Deviations from Ohm's Law in Weak Electrolytes

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of an external electric field on the electrolytic dissociation is computed kinetically from the equations for Brownian motion in the combined Coulomb and external fields, and the result is an increase of the dissociation constant, by the factor K(X)/K(0) = F(b) = 1+b+(1/3)b2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy of an ion crossing a low dielectric membrane: solutions to four relevant electrostatic problems.

TL;DR: The influences on ion energy of membrane thickness, ion-pair formation, “pores” and “carriers” have been estimated and it is shown that only “ pores" and "carriers" lower the energy barrier significantly.
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