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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on October 20, 2005.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.105.070771
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Biophysical Journal 90:480-491 (2006)
© 2006 The Biophysical Society

Theoretical Evaluation of Voltage Inducement on Internal Membranes of Biological Cells Exposed to Electric Fields

Tadej Kotnik and Damijan Miklavcic

Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Tadej Kotnik, E-mail: tadej{at}lbk.fe.uni-lj.si.

Several reports have recently been published on effects of very short and intense electric pulses on cellular organelles; in a number of cases, the cell plasma membrane appeared to be affected less than certain organelle membranes, whereas with longer and less intense pulses the opposite is the case. The effects are the consequence of the voltages induced on the membranes, and in this article we investigate the conditions under which the induced voltage on an organelle membrane could exceed its counterpart on the cell membrane. This would provide a possible explanation of the observed effects of very short pulses. Frequency-domain analysis yields an insight into the dependence of the voltage inducement on the electric and geometric parameters characterizing the cell and its vicinity. We show that at sufficiently high field frequencies, for a range of parameter values the voltage induced on the organelle membrane can indeed exceed the voltage induced on the cell membrane. Particularly, this can occur if the organelle interior is electrically more conductive than the cytosol, or if the organelle membrane has a lower dielectric permittivity than the cell membrane, and we discuss the plausibility of these conditions. Time-domain analysis is then used to determine the courses of the voltage induced on the membranes by pulses with risetimes and durations in the nanosecond range. The particularly high resting voltage in mitochondria, to which the induced voltage superimposes, could contribute to the explanation why these organelles are the primary target of many observed effects.




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