Method of introducing DNA into cells by subjecting them to brief, high-voltage electronic pulses.
applying a small transient electrical charge to tumor cells to increase uptake of chemotherapeutic drugs.
Transformation that is achieved by exposing cells or protoplasts to a brief pulse of electricity, which results in the formation of transient membrane pores through which DNA can be taken up into the cell.
The generation of transient pores in the membrane of living cells by exposing them to brief electrical impulses. Electroporation is used to introduce DNA into cells.
A technique for introducing new DNA into a cell by applying a jolt of electricity to create openings in the plasma membrane that surrounds a cell.
Transformation technique that uses electric fields to temporarily increase permeability of cells to foreign DNA.
The application of high electric field pulses of short duration to create temporary pores (holes) in the membranes of cells.
Phenomenon in which a microbial cell exposed to high voltage electric field pulses temporarily destabilizes the lipid bilayer and proteins of cell membranes.
The use of an electric current to alter membrane permeability, and thus allow e.g. DNA molecules to be introduced into a cell.
Français] One method of transformation in which a weak electric current creates pores in the cell membrane of a cell for entry of the new genes.
A method by which nucleic acids or virus particles can be introduced into protoplasts or cells by creating transient pores in the plasma membrane using an electric pulse. ( 10)
method of inserting DNA into intact leaf tissue
Introduction of DNA into a cell mediated by a brief pulse of electricity.
Introduction of DNA or RNA into plant cells or protoplasts by the disruption of the cell membrane through exposure to an intense electric field.
process using high-voltage electric pulses to make cell membranes permeable to macromolecules. Electroporation (from the words electric and pore) allows for example the introduction of new DNA into cells (commonly used in recombinant DNA technology).
Creation, by means of an electrical current, of transient pores in the plasmalemma usually for the purpose of introducing exogenous material, especially DNA, from the medium.
Electroporation, or electropermeabilization, is a significant increase in the electrical conductivity and permeability of the cell plasma membrane caused by an externally applied electrical field. It is usually used in molecular biology as a way of introducing some substance into a cell, such as loading it with a molecular probe, a drug that can change the cell's function, or a piece of coding DNA.