[PDF][PDF] Hindered diffusion of high molecular weight compounds in brain extracellular microenvironment measured with integrative optical imaging

C Nicholson, L Tao - Biophysical journal, 1993 - cell.com
C Nicholson, L Tao
Biophysical journal, 1993cell.com
This paper describes the theory of an integrative optical imaging system and its application
to the analysis of the diffusion of 3-, 10-, 40-, and 70-kDa fluorescent dextran molecules in
agarose gel and brain extracellular microenvironment. The method uses a precisely defined
source of fluorescent molecules pressure ejected from a micropipette, and a detailed theory
of the intensity contributions from out-of-focus molecules in a three-dimensional medium to a
two-dimensional image. Dextrans tagged with either tetramethylrhodamine or Texas Red …
This paper describes the theory of an integrative optical imaging system and its application to the analysis of the diffusion of 3-, 10-, 40-, and 70-kDa fluorescent dextran molecules in agarose gel and brain extracellular microenvironment. The method uses a precisely defined source of fluorescent molecules pressure ejected from a micropipette, and a detailed theory of the intensity contributions from out-of-focus molecules in a three-dimensional medium to a two-dimensional image. Dextrans tagged with either tetramethylrhodamine or Texas Red were ejected into 0.3% agarose gel or rat cortical slices maintained in a perfused chamber at 34 degrees C and imaged using a compound epifluorescent microscope with a 10 x water-immersion objective. About 20 images were taken at 2–10-s intervals, recorded with a cooled CCD camera, then transferred to a 486 PC for quantitative analysis. The diffusion coefficient in agarose gel, D, and the apparent diffusion coefficient, D*, in brain tissue were determined by fitting an integral expression relating the measured two-dimensional image intensity to the theoretical three-dimensional dextran concentration. The measurements in dilute agarose gel provided a reference value of D and validated the method. Values of the tortuosity, lambda=(D/D*)1/2, for the 3- and 10-kDa dextrans were 1.70 and 1.63, respectively, which were consistent with previous values derived from tetramethylammonium measurements in cortex. Tortuosities for the 40- and 70-kDa dextrans had significantly larger values of 2.16 and 2.25, respectively. This suggests that the extracellular space may have local constrictions that hinder the diffusion of molecules above a critical size that lies in the range of many neurotrophic compounds.
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