Title of article
Mechanisms involved in gene electrotransfer using high- and low-voltage pulses — An in vitro study
Author/Authors
Iztok and Kanduser، نويسنده , , Masa and Miklavcic، نويسنده , , Damijan and Pavlin، نويسنده , , Mojca، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
7
From page
265
To page
271
Abstract
Gene electrotransfer is an established method for gene delivery which uses high-voltage pulses to increase permeability of cell membrane and thus enables transfer of genes. Currently, majority of research is focused on improving in vivo transfection efficiency, while mechanisms involved in gene electrotransfer are not completely understood.
s paper we analyze the mechanisms of gene electrotransfer by using combinations of high-voltage (HV) and low-voltage pulses (LV) in vitro. We applied different combinations of HV and LV pulses to CHO cells and determined the transfection efficiency. We obtained that short HV pulses alone were sufficient to deliver DNA into cells for optimal plasmid concentrations and that LV pulse did not increase transfection efficiency, in contrast to reported studies in vivo. However, for sub-optimal plasmid concentrations combining HV and LV pulses increased transfection rate. Our results suggest that low-voltage pulses increase transfection in conditions where plasmid concentration is low, typically in vivo where mobility of DNA is limited by the extracellular matrix. LV pulses provide additional electrophoretic force which drags DNA toward the cell membrane and consequently increase transfection efficiency, while for sufficiently high concentrations of the plasmid (usually used in vitro) electrophoretic LV pulses do not have an important role.
Keywords
Gene Therapy , Gene electrotransfer , Mechanisms , electrophoresis , High-voltage low-voltage pulses
Journal title
Bioelectrochemistry
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Bioelectrochemistry
Record number
1452018
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