Direct Observation of Post-Sonoporation Membrane Resealing in the Giant Unilamellar Vesicle Model
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Date
2025-04-22
Authors
Advisor
Yu, Alfred
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Waterloo
Abstract
Sonoporation is a microbubble (MB)-mediated ultrasonic cavitation, which has attracted much
attention in recent years due to its high efficiency and precision in non-invasive drug and gene
delivery (Bouakaz et al., 2016; Helfield et al., 2016). However, the cell spontaneous repair process
of the membrane after sonoporation, especially the dynamic mechanism of membrane resealing, has
not been fully elucidated (Rich et al., 2022). Among them, a key mechanistic question is whether
biophysical forces (such as membrane tension) play an important role in the membrane resealing
process. However, this issue remains challenging due to the large number of biological processes in
cells that may affect the dynamic behavior of membranes, such as cytoskeletal rearrangement (Chen
et al., 2014) and endocytosis (Delalande et al., 2015; Zeghimi et al., 2015). To address this issue,
this study innovatively used giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) composed only of phospholipid
bilayers as a minimally simplified membrane research model to explore the membrane reseal
mechanism in sonoporation. In the methodology, GUVs were successfully prepared by
electroforming. Combined with a coupled ultrasound platform of fluorescence microscopy and high-
speed camera, the GUV and microbubble mixed system was exposed in a precise controllable
ultrasound field (ultrasonic frequency: 1 MHz, 10% duty cycle, 1Vpp) to simulate the sonoporation.
The experimental results showed that GUVs were able to spontaneously reseal their membrane pore
after sonoporation, indicating that the phospholipid bilayer has the ability to self-reseal even without
the contribution of cell-mediated physiological processes. Further statistical analysis showed that
the size of the microbubble had a significant effect on the GUV self reseal results: smaller
microbubbles (2–3 μm in diameter) usually formed reversible and easily healed micropores, while
larger microbubbles (>8 μm) often led to severe holes that were difficult to bridge (p < 0.01),
ultimately destroying the stability of the vesicles. This discovery demonstrated for the first time the
key role of biophysical forces in the membrane reseal stage after sonoporation. This study not only
provides a new experimental model and platform based on GUVs, laying the foundation for future
studies of the biophysical mechanism of sonoporation, but also provides a new perspective for a
deeper understanding of the biophysical nature of membrane reseal.
Description
Keywords
ultrasound, sonoporation, GUV, microbubble