Abstract

The plasma membrane of a biological cell is a complex assembly of lipids and membrane proteins, which tightly regulate transmembrane transport. When a cell is exposed to strong electric field, the membrane integrity becomes transiently disrupted by formation of transmembrane pores. This phenomenon termed electroporation is already utilized in many rapidly developing applications in medicine including gene therapy, cancer treatment, and treatment of cardiac arrhythmias. However, the molecular mechanisms of electroporation are not yet sufficiently well understood; in particular, it is unclear where exactly pores form in the complex organization of the plasma membrane. In this study, we combine coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, machine learning methods, and Bayesian survival analysis to identify how formation of pores depends on the local lipid organization. We show that pores do not form homogeneously across the membrane, but colocalize with domains that have specific features, the most important being high density of polyunsaturated lipids. We further show that knowing the lipid organization is sufficient to reliably predict poration sites with machine learning. Additionally, by analysing poration kinetics with Bayesian survival analysis we show that poration does not depend solely on local lipid arrangement, but also on membrane mechanical properties and the polarity of the electric field. Finally, we discuss how the combination of atomistic and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations, machine learning methods, and Bayesian survival analysis can guide the design of future experiments and help us to develop an accurate description of plasma membrane electroporation on the whole-cell level. Achieving this will allow us to shift the optimization of electroporation applications from blind trial-and-error approaches to mechanistic-driven design.

Highlights

  • The plasma membrane of a cell is a complex assembly of hundreds of different types of lipids and membrane proteins, which tightly regulate transmembrane trafficking and participate in cell signalling [1, 2]

  • Such disruption can be useful in many clinical applications, for example when nucleic acids need to be delivered across the plasma membrane into the cell interior, where they can carry out their tasks [3, 4]

  • In this study we focused on lipid pores formed by electric field and we asked three main questions: Where do pores form in membranes with realistic plasma membrane lipid composition? Which membrane features/properties govern the most likely poration sites? Which membrane features/properties govern the poration kinetics?

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Summary

Introduction

The plasma membrane of a cell is a complex assembly of hundreds of different types of lipids and membrane proteins, which tightly regulate transmembrane trafficking and participate in cell signalling [1, 2]. When the cell is exposed to external forces, the membrane integrity can become transiently disrupted by formation of transmembrane pores. Such disruption can be useful in many clinical applications, for example when nucleic acids need to be delivered across the plasma membrane into the cell interior, where they can carry out their tasks [3, 4]. In terms of clinical applications, poration by the application of electric fields or electroporation is the most widely used method. It is approved for treatment of solid tumours, and it is being tested in clinical trials for gene therapy, vaccination against cancer and infectious diseases, and for cardiac ablation [9,10,11,12]

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