时变磁场下的囊泡生物力学。

Q1 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology BMC Biophysics Pub Date : 2015-01-21 eCollection Date: 2015-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s13628-014-0016-0
Hui Ye, Austen Curcuru
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引用次数: 16

摘要

背景:细胞暴露于强电场时表现出扭曲,表明电场对细胞生物力学施加了控制。封闭的纯脂双分子层膜(囊泡)已被广泛用于这种电变形下细胞生物力学的实验和理论研究。另一种用于产生电场的方法是通过具有时变磁场的电磁感应。最近出现了关于细胞力学的磁控制的文献报道。然而,时变磁场作用下的细胞力学理论分析尚不充分。我们发展了一种分析理论来研究一个模型囊泡在时变磁场下的生物力学。根据以前的出版物,为了简化计算,该模型将内部介质和悬浮介质视为有耗介质,将膜厚度设为零,并假设膜的电阻可以忽略。这项工作首次提供了在时变磁场作用下囊泡表面电荷、电场、径向压力、整体平动力和旋转力矩的解析解。分析了这些测量的频率响应,特别是经颅磁刺激(TMS)临床使用的频率。结果:诱导的表面电荷与电场相互作用对囊泡产生生物力学影响。感应表面电荷的分布取决于线圈的方向和场频。这些电荷的密度在低频范围内是微不足道的,但在高频范围内是显著的。作用在囊泡上的径向力的方向取决于囊泡与介质之间的电导率。结论:这项工作为时变磁场下影响细胞生物力学的因素提供了分析框架和见解。临床经颅磁刺激的生物学效应不太可能通过改变脑细胞的生物力学而发生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Vesicle biomechanics in a time-varying magnetic field.

Background: Cells exhibit distortion when exposed to a strong electric field, suggesting that the field imposes control over cellular biomechanics. Closed pure lipid bilayer membranes (vesicles) have been widely used for the experimental and theoretical studies of cellular biomechanics under this electrodeformation. An alternative method used to generate an electric field is by electromagnetic induction with a time-varying magnetic field. References reporting the magnetic control of cellular mechanics have recently emerged. However, theoretical analysis of the cellular mechanics under a time-varying magnetic field is inadequate. We developed an analytical theory to investigate the biomechanics of a modeled vesicle under a time-varying magnetic field. Following previous publications and to simplify the calculation, this model treated the inner and suspending media as lossy dielectrics, the membrane thickness set at zero, and the electric resistance of the membrane assumed to be negligible. This work provided the first analytical solutions for the surface charges, electric field, radial pressure, overall translational forces, and rotational torques introduced on a vesicle by the time-varying magnetic field. Frequency responses of these measures were analyzed, particularly the frequency used clinically by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).

Results: The induced surface charges interacted with the electric field to produce a biomechanical impact upon the vesicle. The distribution of the induced surface charges depended on the orientation of the coil and field frequency. The densities of these charges were trivial at low frequency ranges, but significant at high frequency ranges. The direction of the radial force on the vesicle was dependent on the conductivity ratio between the vesicle and the medium. At relatively low frequencies (<200 KHz), including the frequency used in TMS, the computed radial pressure and translational forces on the vesicle were both negligible.

Conclusions: This work provides an analytical framework and insight into factors affecting cellular biomechanics under a time-varying magnetic field. Biological effects of clinical TMS are not likely to occur via alteration of the biomechanics of brain cells.

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BMC Biophysics
BMC Biophysics BIOPHYSICS-
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