Abstract

Very little is known about the molecular mechanisms supporting living cell membrane electropermeabilization. This concept is based on the local membrane permeability induced by cell exposure to brief and intense external electric field pulses. During the electric field application, an electro-induced membrane electric potential difference is created that is locally associated with the dielectric properties of the plasma membrane. When the new membrane electric potential difference locally reaches a critical value, a local alteration of the membrane structure is induced and leads to reversible permeabilization. In our study, we attempted to determine whether mechanical tension could modulate the triggering of membrane electropermeabilization. Change in lateral tension of Chinese Hamster Ovary cell membrane has been osmotically induced. Cell electropermeabilization was performed in the minute time range after the osmotic stress, i.e., before the regulatory volume decrease being activated by the cell. Living cell electropermeabilization was analyzed on cell population using flow cytometry. We observed that electropermeabilization triggering was significantly facilitated when the lateral membrane tension was increased. The main conclusion is that the critical value of transmembrane potential needed to trigger membrane electropermeabilization, is smaller when the membrane is under lateral mechanical constraint. This supports the hypothesis that both mechanical and electrical constraints play a key role in transient membrane destabilization.

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