Abstract
The interaction of cells in a tissue depends on the nature of the extracellular matrix. The electrical properties of the narrow extracellular space are unknown. Here we consider cell adhesion mediated by extracellular matrix protein on a solid substrate as a model system. We culture human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells on silica coated with fibronectin and determine the electrical resistivity in the cell-solid junction ρJ = rJdJ by combining measurements of the sheet resistance rJ and of the distance dJ between membrane and substrate. The sheet resistance is obtained from phase fluorometry of the voltage-sensitive dye ANNINE-5 by alternating-current stimulation from the substrate. The distance is measured by fluorescence interference contrast microscopy. We change the resistivity of the bath in a range from 66 Ω cm to 750 Ω cm and find that the sheet resistance rJ is proportionally enhanced, but that the distance is invariant around dJ = 75 nm. In all cases, the resulting resistivity ρJ is indistinguishable from the resistivity of the bath. A similar result is obtained for rat neurons cultured on polylysine. On that basis, we propose a "bulk resistivity in cell adhesion" model for cell-solid junctions. The observations suggest that the electrical interaction between cells in a tissue is determined by an extracellular space with the electrical properties of bulk electrolyte. © 2006 by the Biophysical Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Gleixner, R., & Fromherz, P. (2006). The extracellular electrical resistivity in cell adhesion. Biophysical Journal, 90(7), 2600–2611. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.105.072587
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