Life is Electrical
Electric fields pervade biological systems, from the atomic interactions
that determine the minimum free energy paths of ions through membrane
channels to the transmission of signals through the nervous systems of
multicellular animals. Every molecular link in the complex genomic,
transcriptomic, proteomic web of a living cell is formed from the
physical and chemical associations of atoms, which we dissect with
coulombic and quantum mechanical tools.
Life is electrical at the level of the organism as well. Animals
interact with their environment and with each other by sensing and in
some cases generating external electric fields, and of course the
consciousness which permits our contemplation of these matters is
itself anchored in the complex electricity of the brain.
The Strong and Short of It
We are exposed to electric and magnetic fields throughout our lives, from
natural and artificial electromagnetic radiation (the light of the sun,
the cacophony of radio), and from sources like the terrestrial magnetic
field, cellular telephones, hair dryers, microwave ovens, magnetic
resonance imagers, and electrical power transmission lines. But, setting
aside direct sunlight and the cavities of microwave ovens, the physical
magnitude of these exposures is small. Despite the considerable efforts
of dedicated investigators, no persuasive evidence has been presented for
persistent or harmful effects from any of these fields --- assuming that
one obeys common sense, avoiding sunburn and refraining from climbing
into the microwave. (Yes, I will gladly post links to
science-based arguments to the contrary.)
Of course large electric fields can and do affect living systems. Many
biologists are familiar with electroporation, for example, a laboratory
procedure in which cells or tissues are exposed to brief electrical
pulses in order to render them permeable to normally excluded substances
(like pharmacological or genetic material) or to promote cell fusion.
Some of us are studying the response of cells to ultrashort pulses ---
too short to cause electroporation --- with rise times and amplitudes
sufficient to develop substantial electrical potentials across targeted
intracellular structures.
Electroperturbation
Physiological transmembrane electric fields are on the order of tens of
megavolts per meter. Generating pulses that are fast enough to cross the
capacitive barrier of the cytoplasmic membrane and large enough in
amplitude to produce perturbative fields in the interior of the cell is
one of the challenges of electrobionics.
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