DocumentCode :
171329
Title :
Electrical analysis of cell membrane poration induced by an intense nanosecond pulsed electric field, using an atomistic-to-continuum method
Author :
Kohler, Sophie ; Ming-Chak Ho ; Levine, Zachary A. ; Vernier, P.T. ; Leveque, P. ; Arnaud-Cormos, D.
Author_Institution :
XLIM, Univ. of Limoges, Limoges, France
fYear :
2014
fDate :
1-6 June 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
Pulsed electric fields of nanosecond duration and high intensity (in the megavolt-per-meter range) have the ability to trigger functional modifications in biological cells, without irreversible disruption of the cell membranes. Although the biophysical mechanisms underlying the induced biological effects are not yet clear, promising applications have been found in biology, medicine and environment. Applications in medicine include cancer treatment, acceleration of wound healing or pain control. Transient nanometer-sized pores are believed to form on a nanosecond time scale in cell membranes exposed to high-intensity nanosecond pulsed electric fields. Direct observation of pore creation has not yet been achieved due to the involved spatiotemporal scales and the experimental constraints. In this study, we combine molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and a quasi-static approach using a custom implementation of the 3D finite-difference method to investigate the interactions that drive pore formation in cell membranes exposed to an intense nanosecond pulsed electric field. The developed method allows to compute and map at cell membranes the 3D spatiotemporal profiles of the electric potentials, electric fields and electric field gradients with atomistic details and subnanosecond dynamics.
Keywords :
electric fields; electric potential; finite difference methods; membranes; 3D finite-difference method; 3D spatiotemporal profiles; MD simulations; atomistic details; atomistic-to-continuum method; biological cells; biophysical mechanisms; cancer treatment; cell membrane poration; electric field gradients; electric potentials; electrical analysis; experimental constraints; functional modifications; induced biological effects; intense nanosecond pulsed electric field; medicine; molecular dynamics simulations; nanosecond time scale; pain control; pore creation; quasi-static approach; spatiotemporal scales; subnanosecond dynamics; transient nanometer-sized pores; wound healing; Abstracts; Biological system modeling; Biomembranes; Computational modeling; Nanobioscience; Transient analysis; Bioelectric phenomena; biological system modeling; dosimetry; molecular computing; pulsed power;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microwave Symposium (IMS), 2014 IEEE MTT-S International
Conference_Location :
Tampa, FL
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/MWSYM.2014.6848464
Filename :
6848464
Link To Document :
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