Scientific Reports (Sep 2021)

V m -related extracellular potentials observed in red blood cells

  • Michael Pycraft Hughes,
  • Emily J. Kruchek,
  • Andrew D. Beale,
  • Stephen J. Kitcatt,
  • Sara Qureshi,
  • Zachary P. Trott,
  • Oriane Charbonnel,
  • Paul A. Agbaje,
  • Erin A. Henslee,
  • Robert A. Dorey,
  • Rebecca Lewis,
  • Fatima H. Labeed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-98102-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Even in nonexcitable cells, the membrane potential V m is fundamental to cell function, with roles from ion channel regulation, development, to cancer metastasis. V m arises from transmembrane ion concentration gradients; standard models assume homogeneous extracellular and intracellular ion concentrations, and that V m only exists across the cell membrane and has no significance beyond it. Using red blood cells, we show that this is incorrect, or at least incomplete; V m is detectable beyond the cell surface, and modulating V m produces quantifiable and consistent changes in extracellular potential. Evidence strongly suggests this is due to capacitive coupling between V m and the electrical double layer, rather than molecular transporters. We show that modulating V m changes the extracellular ion composition, mimicking the behaviour if voltage-gated ion channels in non-excitable channels. We also observed V m -synchronised circadian rhythms in extracellular potential, with significant implications for cell–cell interactions and cardiovascular disease.