Methods Mol Biol
June 2008
Electroporation has been used in biological laboratories for many years to transiently porate cell membranes and permit plasmid or protein transfection. It has been shown that the application of pulsed electric fields (PEFs) of defined strength will kill off larger cells and select for viable small cells, in samples containing heterogeneous cells. This permits the selective killing of several blood and bone marrow-resident tumor cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutologous stem cell transplantation, in the setting of hematologic malignancies such as lymphoma, improves disease-free survival if the graft has undergone tumor purging. Here we show that flowing hematopoietic cells through pulsed electric fields (PEFs) effectively purges myeloma cells without sacrificing functional stem cells. Electric fields can induce irreversible cell membrane pores in direct relation to cell diameter, an effect we exploit in a flowing system appropriate for clinical scale.
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