Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5507022 | Biochemistry and Biophysics Reports | 2017 | 10 Pages |
â¢Microorganisms survive the exposure to high voltage in an electrohydrodynamic liquid bridge.â¢A simple 2D model shows a natural Faraday cage effect protecting microorganisms against cytolysis.â¢The method presented provides a basis for selective disinfection of solutions containing different microorganisms.
An aqueous electrohydrodynamic (EHD) floating liquid bridge is a unique environment for studying the influence of protonic currents (mAÂ cmâ2) in strong DC electric fields (kVÂ cmâ1) on the behavior of microorganisms. It forms in between two beakers filled with water when high-voltage is applied to these beakers. We recently discovered that exposure to this bridge has a stimulating effect on Escherichia coli.. In this work we show that the survival is due to a natural Faraday cage effect of the cell wall of these microorganisms using a simple 2D model. We further confirm this hypothesis by measuring and simulating the behavior of Bacillus subtilis subtilis, Neochloris oleoabundans, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and THP-1 monocytes. Their behavior matches the predictions of the model: cells without a natural Faraday cage like algae and monocytes are mostly killed and weakened, whereas yeast and Bacillus subtilis subtilis survive. The effect of the natural Faraday cage is twofold: First, it diverts the current from passing through the cell (and thereby killing it); secondly, because it is protonic it maintains the osmotic pressure in the cell wall, thereby mitigating cytolysis which would normally occur due to the low osmotic pressure of the surrounding medium. The method presented provides the basis for selective disinfection of solutions containing different microorganisms.