Open AccessBook
Guide to Electroporation and Electrofusion
Donald C. Chang
- 01 Dec 1991
723
TL;DR: Mechanisms and Fundamental Processes in Electroporation and Electrofusion: D.C. Chang, Structure and Dynamics of Electric Field-Induced Membrane Pores as Revealed by Rapid-Freezing Electron Microscopy, and J.E. Sowers, Mechanisms of Electropororation and electrofusion using a Pulsed Radio-Frequency Electric Field.
read more
Abstract: D.C. Chang, B.M. Chassy, J.A. Saunders, and A.E. Sowers, Overview of Electroporation and Electrofusion. Mechanisms and Fundamental Processes in Electroporation and Electrofusion: D.C. Chang, Structure and Dynamics of Electric Field-Induced Membrane Pores as Revealed by Rapid-Freezing Electron Microscopy. K. Kinosita, M. Hibino, H. Itoh, M. Shigemori, K. Hirano, Y. Kirino, and T. Hayakawa, Events of Membrane Electroporation Visualized on a Time Scale from Microseconds to Seconds. T.Y. Tsong, Time Sequence of Molecular Events in Electroporation. L.V. Chernomordik, Electropores in Lipid Bilayers and Cell Membranes. E. Neumann, A. Sprafke, E. Boldt, and H. Wolf, Biophysical Considerations of Membrane Electroporation. J.C. Weaver and A. Barnett, Progress Toward a Theoretical Model for Electroporation Mechanism: Membrane Electrical Behavior and Molecular Transport. A.E. Sowers, Mechanisms of Electroporation and Electrofusion. J. Teissi*aae and M.-P. Rols, Interfacial Membrane Alteration Associated with Electropermeabilization and Electrofusion. D.S. Dimitrov, Membrane Fusion Kinetics. S.W. Hui and D.A. Stenger, Effects of Intercellular Forces on Electrofusion. Q. Zheng and D.C. Chang, Dynamics of Cytoskeletal Reorganization in CV-1 Cells during Electrofusion. Applications of Electroporation and Electrofusion in Current Research: H. Potter and S.W.F. Cooke, Gene Transfer into Adherent Cells Growing on Microbeads. L.H. Reid and O. Smithies, Gene Targeting and Electroporation. J.A. Saunders, B.F. Matthews, and S.L. Van Wert, Pollen Electrotransformation for Gene Transfer in Plants. G.W. Bates, Electrofusion of Plant Protoplasts and the Production of Somatic Hybrids. J.T. Trevors, B.M. Chassy, W.J. Dower, and H.P. Blaschek, Electrotransformation of Bacteria by Plasmid DNA. W.J. Dower and S.E. Cwirla, Creating Vast Peptide Expression Libraries: Electroporation as a Tool to Construct Plasmid Libraries of Greater Than 109 Recombinants. D.C. Chang, J.R. Hunt, Q. Zheng, and P.-Q. Gao, Electroporation and Electrofusion Using a Pulsed Radio-Frequency Electric Field. Y. Mouneimme, P.-F. Tosi, R. Barhoumi, and C. Nicolau, Electroinsertion: An Electrical Method for Protein Implantation into Cell Membranes. R.R. Swezey and D. Epel, Electroporation as a Tool to Study Enzyme Activities in Situ. U. Karsten, P. Stolley, and B. Seidel, Comparison of PEG-Induced and Electric Field-Mediated Cell Fusion in the Generation of Monoclonal Antibodies against a Variety of Soluble and Cellular Antigens. L.C. Smith, Production of Genetically Identical Embryos by Electrofusion. R. Heller and R. Gilbert, Development of Cell-Tissue Electrofusion for Biological Applications. S.R. Gallagher and D.C. Chang, Novel Applications of Electroporation. Practical Protocols for Electroporation and Electrofusion: D.C. Chang, Design of Protocols for Electroporation and Electrofusion: Selection of Electrical Parameters. H. Potter, Protocols for Using Electroporation to Stably or Transiently Transfect Mammalian Cells. G.R. MacGregor, Optimization of Electroporation Using Reporter Genes. J.A. Saunders and G.W. Bates, Genetic Manipulation of Plant Cells by Means of Electroporation and Electrofusion. W.J. Dower, B.M. Chassy, J.T. Trevors, and H.P. Blaschek, Protocols for the Transformation of Bacteria by Electroporation. D.M. Becker and L. Guarente, Protocol for High-Efficiency Yeast Transformation. M.I. Mally, M.E. McKnight, and M.C. Glassy, Protocols of Electroporation and Electrofusion for Producing Human Hybridomas. S.M.M. Rehman, S. Perkins, U. Zimmermann, and S.K.H. Foung, Human Hybridoma Formation by Hypo-Osmolar Electrofusion. J.M. Robl, P. Collas, R. Fissore, and J.R. Dobrinsky, Electrically Induced Fusion and Activation in Nuclear Transplant Embryos. Instrumentation for Electroporation and Electrofusion: B.M. Chassy, J.A. Saunders, and A.E. Sowers, Pulse Generators for Electrofusion and Electroporation. Chapter References. Index.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Effect of pulsed, high-power radiofrequency radiation on electroporation of mammalian cells
TL;DR: Experiments indicate that the greatest effect ofRF modulation on survivability and electroporation efficiency occurs at electric fields where a majority of the cells are killed in the absence of RF modulation: 1.6-2 kV/cm.
35
Review Paper on Cell Membrane Electroporation of Microalgae using Electric Field Treatment Method for Microalgae Lipid Extraction
Costantine Joannes,Coswald Stephen Sipaut,Jedol Dayou,Suhaimi Md Yasir,Rachel Fran Mansa +4 more
- 02 Apr 2015
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the recent studies on the lipid extraction of microalgae that mainly highlighted on the cell disruption method using variety of micro algae species was presented, in which the selection of cell disruption methods and devices are crucial in order to achieve the highest extraction percentage of lipid and other valuable intracellular (proteins, carotenoids and chlorophylls) from micro algae cell.
35
Simplified equations for the transmembrane potential induced in ellipsoidal cells of rotational symmetry
TL;DR: In this paper, the Schwan equation was used to describe the dependence of transmembrane potentials induced by an external field on the electric media properties, the field frequency and the axis ratio for oblate and prolate spheroids.
35
Isolation of retinal proteins that interact with retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator by interaction trap screen in yeast.
TL;DR: A yeast two-hybrid system is used to isolate proteins that interact with RPGR in the retina to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying this severe form of blindness.
35