Title Pulsed electric fields alter expression of NF-κB promoter-controlled gene /
Authors Kavaliauskaitė, Justina ; Kazlauskaitė, Auksė ; Lazutka, Juozas Rimantas ; Mozolevskis, Gatis ; Stirkė, Arūnas
DOI 10.3390/ijms23010451
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Is Part of International journal of molecular sciences.. Basel : MDPI AG. 2022, vol. 23, iss. 1, art. no. 451, p. 1-15.. eISSN 1422-0067
Keywords [eng] microsecond pulsed electric field ; inducible gene transcription control ; reporter assay ; secreted alkaline phosphatase ; mammalian cells ; cell line ; NF-κB
Abstract [eng] The possibility to artificially adjust and fine-tune gene expression is one of the key milestones in bioengineering, synthetic biology, and advanced medicine. Since the effects of proteins or other transgene products depend on the dosage, controlled gene expression is required for any applications, where even slight fluctuations of the transgene product impact its function or other critical cell parameters. In this context, physical techniques demonstrate optimistic perspectives, and pulsed electric field technology is a potential candidate for a noninvasive, biophysical gene regulator, exploiting an easily adjustable pulse generating device. We exposed mammalian cells, transfected with a NF-κB pathway-controlled transcription system, to a range of microsecond-duration pulsed electric field parameters. To prevent toxicity, we used protocols that would generate relatively mild physical stimulation. The present study, for the first time, proves the principle that microsecond-duration pulsed electric fields can alter single-gene expression in plasmid context in mammalian cells without significant damage to cell integrity or viability. Gene expression might be upregulated or downregulated depending on the cell line and parameters applied. This noninvasive, ligand-, cofactor-, nanoparticle-free approach enables easily controlled direct electrostimulation of the construct carrying the gene of interest; the discovery may contribute towards the path of simplification of the complexity of physical systems in gene regulation and create further synergies between electronics, synthetic biology, and medicine.
Published Basel : MDPI AG
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2022
CC license CC license description