Sugar I P, Förster W, Neumann E
Biophys Chem. 1987 May 9;26(2-3):321-35. doi: 10.1016/0301-4622(87)80033-9.
High electric field impulses (1-20 kV/cm, 1-20 microseconds) may trigger fusion between adhering cells or lipid vesicles (electrofusion). In this paper a qualitative model of electrofusion is proposed consistent with both electron and light microscopic data. Electrofusion is considered as a multistep process comprising tight membrane-contact formation, membrane electroporation as well as an alternating series of subsequent fast collective and slow diffusive fusion stages. The following sequence of steps is suggested: The electric field pulse enforces (via polarization) a tight contact between the membranes of the cells or vesicles to be fused. During tight-contact formation between the opposing membrane surfaces the membrane-adherent water layers are partially squeezed out from the intermembraneous space. Pores are formed in the double membrane contact area (electroporation) involving lateral diffusion and rotation of the lipid molecules in both adhering membrane parts. With increasing pore density, pore-pore interactions lead to short-range coalescence of double membrane pores resulting in ramified cracks; especially small tongues and loops are formed. At supercritical pore density long-range coalescence of the pores occurs (percolation) producing one large double membrane loop (or tongue) and subsequently one large hole in the contact area. After switching off the electric field, the smaller pores, tongues and loops reseal and water flows back into the intermembraneous space of the double membrane in the contact area. As a consequence of the increasing membrane-membrane separation due to water backflow, cooperative rounding of the edges of remaining larger tongues and holes occurs. This results in the formation of an intercellular cytoplasm bridge (channel) concomitant with the disappearance of the contact line between the fusing cells. The membrane parts surrounded by continuous loop-like cracks may separate from the system and may finally form vesicles. Our electrofusion model comprises a strong linkage between the membrane pore formation by high electric fields (electroporation) and the process of electrofusion. Additionally, both pore-pore interactions as well as protein-protein interactions in the contact area of the fusing cells are explicitly introduced. The model provides a qualitative molecular description of basic experimental observations such as the production of membrane fragments, of smaller inside-out vesicles and the formation of larger intercellular cytoplasm bridges.
高电场脉冲(1 - 20千伏/厘米,1 - 20微秒)可能会引发黏附细胞或脂质囊泡之间的融合(电融合)。本文提出了一个与电子显微镜和光学显微镜数据均相符的电融合定性模型。电融合被视为一个多步骤过程,包括紧密的膜接触形成、膜电穿孔以及随后交替出现的一系列快速集体融合阶段和缓慢扩散融合阶段。建议按以下步骤顺序进行:电场脉冲通过极化作用促使待融合的细胞或囊泡的膜紧密接触。在相对的膜表面形成紧密接触的过程中,膜附着的水层会从膜间空间被部分挤出。在双膜接触区域形成孔隙(电穿孔),这涉及到两个附着膜部分中脂质分子的横向扩散和旋转。随着孔隙密度的增加,孔隙 - 孔隙相互作用导致双膜孔隙的短程合并,从而产生分支状裂缝;尤其会形成小的舌状和环状结构。在超临界孔隙密度下,孔隙会发生长程合并(渗流),在接触区域产生一个大的双膜环(或舌状结构),随后形成一个大洞。关闭电场后,较小的孔隙、舌状和环状结构重新封闭,水回流到接触区域双膜的膜间空间。由于水回流导致膜 - 膜间距增加,剩余较大舌状和孔洞边缘会协同变圆。这导致形成细胞间细胞质桥(通道),同时融合细胞之间的接触线消失。被连续环状裂缝包围的膜部分可能会与系统分离,最终可能形成囊泡。我们的电融合模型包括高电场导致的膜孔隙形成(电穿孔)与电融合过程之间的紧密联系。此外,明确引入了融合细胞接触区域的孔隙 - 孔隙相互作用以及蛋白质 - 蛋白质相互作用。该模型对诸如膜片段的产生及较小的外翻囊泡的形成以及较大细胞间细胞质桥的形成等基本实验观察结果提供了定性的分子描述。