Biomolecule electrotransfer to mammalian cells

Doctoral Thesis (2022)
Author(s)

A. Muralidharan (TU Delft - ChemE/Product and Process Engineering)

Contributor(s)

M.T. Kreutzer – Promotor (TU Delft - ChemE/Chemical Engineering, TU Delft - Architectural Engineering +Technology)

P. Boukany – Promotor (TU Delft - ChemE/Product and Process Engineering)

DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.4233/uuid:5d44a19d-5916-4e06-9fef-b8902ae2433d Final published version
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
ISBN (print)
978-90-8593-531-5
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Abstract

Delivery of biomolecules using pulsed electric fields or electrotransfer has applications such as biomedical engineering, bioprocess engineering and genomic engineering. When a cell is placed in an electric field, the induced transmembrane voltage catalyzes the formation of pores on the cell membrane. This enables the delivery of otherwise cell membrane-impermeable molecules to the cells. Despite the broad significance, a complete biophysical understanding of electrotransfer at a subcellular level and a translation of electroporation as a high-throughput and high-efficiency technique is still lacking. In this dissertation: (i) we unravel how actin networks regulate the cell membrane electropermeability, (ii) we reveal the intracellular biophysical transport mechanisms of electrotransferred DNA cargo, (iii) we present a localized electroporation device where cells are trapped in regions of high electric fields by the flow.

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