Abstract

Traditionally, microsecond pulsed electric field was widely used in cell electrofusion technology. However, it was difficult to fuse the cells with different sizes. Because the effect of electroporation based on microsecond pulses was greatly influenced by cell sizes. It had been reported that the differences between cell sizes can be ignored when cells were exposed to nanosecond pulses. However, pores induced by those short nanosecond pulses tended to be very small (0.9 nm) and the pores were more easy to recover. In this work, a finite element method was used to simulate the distribution, radius and density of the pores. The innovative idea of “cell electrofusion based on nanosecond/microsecond pulses” was proposed in order to combine the advantages of nanosecond pulses and microsecond pulses. The model consisted of two contact cells with different sizes. Three kinds of pulsed electric fields were made up of two 100-ns, 10-kV/cm pulses; two 10-μs, 1-kV/cm pulses; and a sequence of a 100-ns, 10-kV/cm pulse, followed by a 10-μs, 1-kV/cm pulse. Some obvious advantageous can be found when nanosecond/microsecond pulses were considered. The pore radius was large enough (70nm) and density was high (5×1013m-2) in the cell junction area. Moreover, pores in the non-contact area of the cell membrane were small (1–10 nm) and sparse (109-1012m-2). Areas where the transmembrane voltage was higher than 1V were only concentrated in the cell junction. The transmembrane voltage of other areas were at most 0.6V when we tested the rest of the cell membrane. Cell fusion efficiency can be improved remarkably because electroporation was concentrated in the cell contact area.

Highlights

  • Cell fusion was defined as the process of combining two or more cells to form a combined cell

  • The microsecond pulse was applied to enlarge the radius of pores which were located in the cell junction area

  • Numerical simulations results about cell fusion were showed in this work

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Summary

Introduction

Cell fusion was defined as the process of combining two or more cells to form a combined cell. This process can occur naturally or be induced through biological, physical, or chemical means [1,2,3,4,5]. Cell fusion was a core technology of biological preparation (such as monoclonal antibody production)——Immune responses were induced in mice, after mice were injected with specific antigen proteins. The murine myeloma cells were fused with B lymphocytes and screened by a specific selection medium.

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