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  • Title: Passive electrical properties of the membrane and cytoplasm of cultured rat basophil leukemia cells. I. Dielectric behavior of cell suspensions in 0.01-500 MHz and its simulation with a single-shell model.
    Author: Irimajiri A, Asami K, Ichinowatari T, Kinoshita Y.
    Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1987 Jan 26; 896(2):203-13. PubMed ID: 3801468.
    Abstract:
    Frequency dependence of relative permittivity (dielectric constant) and conductivity, or the 'dielectric dispersion', of cultured cells (RBL-1 line) in suspension was measured using a fast impedance analyzer system capable of scanning 92 frequency points over a 10 kHz-500 MHz range within 80 s. Examination of the resulting dispersion curves of an improved reliability revealed that the dispersions consisted of at least two separate components. The low-frequency component (dispersion 1) had a permittivity increment (delta epsilon) of 10(3)-10(4) and a characteristic frequency (fc) at several hundred kHz; for the high-frequency component (dispersion 2), delta epsilon was smaller by a factor of 10(2) and fc = 10-30 MHz. Increments delta epsilon for both components increased with the volume fraction of cell suspension, while fc did not change appreciably as long as the conductivity of suspending medium was fixed. By fitting a model for shelled spheres (the 'single-shell' model) to the data of dispersion 1, the dielectric capacity of the plasma membrane phase (Cm) was estimated to be approx. 1.4 microF/cm2 for the cells in an isotonic medium. However, simulation by this particular shell model failed to reproduce the entire dispersion profile leaving a sizable discrepancy between theory and experiment especially at frequencies above 1 MHz where dispersion 2 took place. This discrepancy could not be filled up even by taking into consideration either the effect of cell size distribution actually determined or that of possible heterogeneity in the intracellular conductivity. The present data strongly indicate the need for a more penetrating model that effectively accounts for the behavior of dispersion 2.
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