On the molecular mechanisms implicated in the bipolar cancellation of membrane electroporation

2022 
Abstract Bipolar cancellation is the phenomenon in which the permeability of cell membranes subjected to high intensity short pulsed electric field (ns-μs range) is reduced or eliminated when the system is subjected to bipolar instead of monopolar pulses. Although several studies have tried to explain bipolar cancellation, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Very few articles study bipolar cancellation by means of molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. In this paper, we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying the difference in electroporation induced by bipolar and monopolar picosecond electric pulses (EPs) using MD simulation. The electric field gradients and electric forces on water molecules of the two pulses were analyzed in detail for the first time. For a certain pulse width, when the field intensity is relatively small, the direction of bipolar electric force on the interfacial water molecule reverses as the bipolar EPs reverse, while the electric force on interfacial water molecules of the cathode side remains in the same direction as that of applied monopolar EPs. The bipolar electric force reversal delays the water protrusion and increases the pore formation time. Therefore, this phenomenon could correspond to bipolar cancellation. When the field intensity is relatively large, although the bipolar electric force direction still reverses, half of the total time of the monopolar EPs has no electric fields. The electric forces of monopolar no-field half-cycles are much smaller than those of the bipolar EPs. Therefore, the pore formation time of bipolar EPs reduces, and this phenomenon is called bipolar enhancement. The occurrence of bipolar cancellation or bipolar enhancement depends on conditions such as the width and intensity of the pulse.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []