scholarly journals Enhanced Patch-Clamp Technique to Study Antimicrobial Peptides and Viroporins, Inserted in a Cell Plasma Membrane with Fully Inactivated Endogenous Conductances

Author(s):  
Marco Aquila ◽  
Mascia Benedusi ◽  
Alberto Milani ◽  
Giorgio Rispoli
Author(s):  
Y Zhao ◽  
S Inayat ◽  
D A Dikin ◽  
J H Singer ◽  
R S Ruoff ◽  
...  

The patch clamp technique permits high-resolution recording of the ionic currents flowing through a cell's plasma membrane. In different configurations, this technique has allowed experimenters to record and manipulate the currents that flow either through single ion channels or those that flow across the whole plasma membrane. Unfortunately, the conventional patch clamp method is laborious, requiring the careful fabrication of electrodes, skillful manipulation of the patch pipette towards a cell, and the clever design of electronics and apparatus to allow low-noise recordings. Advances in microfabrication offer promising technologies for high-throughput patch clamp recordings, particularly suitable for drug screening. This paper provides a review of the advances that have been made in the patch clamp technique over the years and considers where application of nanotechnology might provide significant contributions in the future.


2021 ◽  
Vol 271 ◽  
pp. 04037
Author(s):  
Nanjun Chen ◽  
Qigeng Fang

As one of the most versatile and universal second messengers, calcium plays an essential role in cell life. Here we briefly reviewed the research progress of how different calcium channels are located at the cell plasma membrane, including voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs), receptor-operated channels (ROC), and store-operated channels (ROC). These channels can regulate different cancer progression. Afterward, the patch clamp technique's development and operating principle, an important quantitative method used for ion channel investigation, are introduced in this paper.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Soule ◽  
F Illien ◽  
S Kulifaj ◽  
A Joliot ◽  
C Gourier ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTPenetratin is a Cell Penetrating Peptide able to cross the cell plasma membrane possibly bound to a cargo molecule to be delivered into the cell. The mechanism of its entry is poorly known. A key to a molecular description of this mechanism is to identify the partners of Penetratin at the cell surface during its adhesion and internalization. We used the Biomembrane Force Probe to identify the partners during the first second of adhesion of Penetratin on the cell plasma membrane. We evidenced that heparan sulfates are the first partners after contact as well as unknown partners hidden by sialic acids. Experiments of binding of Penetratin on vesicles bearing charged or sulfated lipids showed no adhesion pointing that a negatively charged partner is not enough and there is a specificity for certain chemical groups bearing the charges. A model of the measured forces of interaction enabled to determine the adhesion energy of a Penetratin with heparan sulfates on a cell to be in the range 18 to 22 kBT.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thiago Castro-Gomes ◽  
J. Mário C. Vilela ◽  
Margareth S. Andrade ◽  
Paulo S. L. Beirão ◽  
Fréderic Frézard ◽  
...  

AbstractWe have previously shown that Leishmania amazonensis produces and secretes a cytolysin that lyses membranes of mammalian cells, including macrophages, its host cell. Using the patch-clamp technique, we have previously demonstrated that the mechanism by which this cytolysin rupture macrophages plasma membrane is by pore formation, which lead us to name it leishporin. While we have characterized leishporin in several aspects, its molecular identity is still unknown. Its behavior suggests that leishporin is, or depend on, a protein, but recent results also suggests that a non-protein molecule is involved in cell lysis. Although the patch-clamp has undeniably revealed that L. amazonensis extracts generates pores in macrophages, these structures have not been spotted on cell membranes, which prompted us to several questions: 1) What is the appearance of leishporin-induced pores? Is it similar to that of other described pores? 2) Do these pores physically span lipid bilayers? 4) Are their directly-measured sizes compatible with those previously suggested by patch-clamp? 5) Do these pores fuse with one another, enlarging in size, as suggested by our previous reports? In the present work, we have used two membrane models, erythrocytes and liposomes, to visualize pores induced by the cytolysin on parasite extracts. Leishporin-mediated lysed erythrocytes or liposomes were analyzed by atomic force microscopy (AFM), which allowed us to visualize multiple membrane-spanning pores of variable diameters, ranging from 25 to 230 nm. They do not resemble to protein-formed pores, but rather, to pores made by small molecules such as lipids or peptides, as also visualized by AFM. Our results suggest that the maximum size for individual pores formed by leishporin is around 32 nm, but indicate that they are prone to coalesce, originating large membrane damages that leads to cell collapse, what seems to be a unique property among pore-forming cytolysins.Author summaryOne of the mechanisms whereby a cell can be destroyed is by punching holes into their membranes. Through these holes, due to differences in osmolarity between the outside and the inside of a cell, water flows towards the cytoplasm causing plasma membrane ruptures, which damages or lyses cells. We have previously described in the protozoan parasite Leishmania amazonensis one of such activities. Using an electrophysiology technique, we have found that parasite extracts lyse cells by making pores on their membranes. However these pores were not directly visualized so far. In this report, using a high-resolution-type scanning microscopy, the atomic force microscopy, we showed in red blood cells membranes and artificial lipid membranes (liposomes) the physical aspect of the pores we described earlier. We observed that these pores are circular-shaped structures with variable diameters, ranging from 25 to 230 nm that span the whole thickness of both types of membranes. We verified that L. amazonensis extracts-mediated pores resemble to pores formed by lipids or peptides and not by pores formed by proteins and that they may fuse with one another forming larger holes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-14
Author(s):  
Tiago Dos Santos-Nascimento ◽  
Kleyane Morais Veras ◽  
José Ossian Almeida Souza-Filho ◽  
Luiz Moreira-Júnior

The electrophysiological and pharmacological study involving sensory and autonomic neurons enables the development of new effective agents in the treatment of neuropathic disorders, since they enable the elucidation of the mechanisms underlying the malfunction of the nervous system. In this context, the patch clamp technique increased the study of cells, providing a high-resolution method at the molecular level for observing the flow of ions through ion channels characteristic of excitable cells [1], such as the neurons. When using different protocols with combinations of intracellular and extracellular solutions with specific pharmacological agents, this technique allows different unit and/or macroscopic records of active and passive electrical variables of cellular activity [2] that it favored the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine to Erwin Neher and Bert Sakmann in 1991. Although the whole cell mode is the most used configuration in health-related researches, little is known in health courses. To apply this technique to neurons, it is commonly necessary to dissociate neurossomas. Figure 01 shows sensory neurossome of the dorsal root ganglion (GRD) of rats from the bioterium of the State University of Ceará (CEUA process number 10339956-9). The process of isolating neurossomas from the intact ganglion consists of two phases: 1) Collagenase (1mg / ml for 75 min) and Trypsin + EDTA (0.25% and 0.025%, respectively, for 12 minutes); 2) Mechanical dispersion with 3 Pasteur glass pipettes with decreasing diameter (2.5 mm, 1 mm and 0.5 mm, respectively). Then, the neurossomas were plated on coverslips previously treated with poly-D-lysine maintained in supplemented DMEM and incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 [3]. The figure shows a neurossoma 24h after plating. This cell has approximately 25 µM in diameter, which it plays role nociception function [4]. Furthermore, the nucleus is not centralized, the cell does not have neurites. As for the micropipette, capillaries were used for micro-hematocrit without heparin (75 mm length, 1 mm inner diameter and 1.5 mm outer diameter) for making with tip resistance range from 1 and 3 MΩ after filling with the solution to compose intracellular medium [5]. In this technique, a microelectrode was micrometrically move toward until it lightly touched the plasma membrane. Then, a continuous negative pressure was applied to increase the contact of the glass with the membrane, stabilizing the seal (interaction between membrane and glass) and increasing it until its resistance reaches the order of 109 ohm (GΩ). Then, more suction was applied to cause the cell surface under the microelectrode to rupture, thus providing access to the interior of the cell, allowing excellent control of the cell membrane potential and, consequently, high-fidelity records of ionic currents that flow through ion channels present in the plasma membrane of neurossomas.


Methods ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew F Mescher ◽  
Elena Savelieva

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