Scientific Reports (Jan 2024)

Genetically engineered HEK cells as a valuable tool for studying electroporation in excitable cells

  • Tina Batista Napotnik,
  • Bor Kos,
  • Tomaž Jarm,
  • Damijan Miklavčič,
  • Rodney P. O’Connor,
  • Lea Rems

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-51073-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Electric pulses used in electroporation-based treatments have been shown to affect the excitability of muscle and neuronal cells. However, understanding the interplay between electroporation and electrophysiological response of excitable cells is complex, since both ion channel gating and electroporation depend on dynamic changes in the transmembrane voltage (TMV). In this study, a genetically engineered human embryonic kidney cells expressing NaV1.5 and Kir2.1, a minimal complementary channels required for excitability (named S-HEK), was characterized as a simple cell model used for studying the effects of electroporation in excitable cells. S-HEK cells and their non-excitable counterparts (NS-HEK) were exposed to 100 µs pulses of increasing electric field strength. Changes in TMV, plasma membrane permeability, and intracellular Ca2+ were monitored with fluorescence microscopy. We found that a very mild electroporation, undetectable with the classical propidium assay but associated with a transient increase in intracellular Ca2+, can already have a profound effect on excitability close to the electrostimulation threshold, as corroborated by multiscale computational modelling. These results are of great relevance for understanding the effects of pulse delivery on cell excitability observed in context of the rapidly developing cardiac pulsed field ablation as well as other electroporation-based treatments in excitable tissues.