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. 1992 Nov;63(5):1320-7.
doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(92)81709-5.

Electroporation and electrophoretic DNA transfer into cells. The effect of DNA interaction with electropores

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Electroporation and electrophoretic DNA transfer into cells. The effect of DNA interaction with electropores

S I Sukharev et al. Biophys J. 1992 Nov.

Abstract

It has been shown recently that electrically induced DNA transfer into cells is a fast vectorial process with the same direction as DNA electrophoresis in an external electric field (Klenchin, V. A., S. I. Sukharev, S. M. Serov, L. V. Chernomordik, and Y. A. Chizmadzhev. 1991. Biophys. J. 60:804-811). Here we describe the effect of DNA interaction with membrane electropores and provide additional evidences for the key role of DNA electrophoresis in cell electrotransfection. The assay of electrically induced uptake of fluorescent dextrans (FDs) by cells shows that the presence of DNA in the medium during electroporation leads to a sharp increase in membrane permeability to FDs of M(r) < 20,000. The permeability increases with DNA concentration and the effect is seen even if FD is added to the cell suspension a few minutes after pulse application. The longer the DNA fragment, the greater the increase in permeability. The use of a two-pulse technique allows us to separate two effects provided by a pulsed electric field: membrane electroporation and DNA electrophoresis. The first pulse (6 kV/cm, 10 microseconds) creates pores efficiently, whereas transfection efficiency (TE) is low. The second pulse of much lower amplitude, but substantially longer (0.2 kV/cm, 10 ms), does not cause poration and transfection by itself but enhances TE by about one order of magnitude. In two-pulse experiments, TE rises monotonously with the increase of the second pulse duration. By varying the delay duration between the two pulses, we estimate the lifetime of electropores (which are DNA-permeable in conditions of low electric field) as tens of seconds. The data suggest that the mechanism of cell electrotransfection is underlain by electrophoretic movement of DNA through membrane pores, the size of which is determined by interaction with DNA in an electric field.

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