Development of μ-Low-Flow-Push–Pull Perfusion ... - ACS Publications

Oct 27, 2017 - inferred from a particular experimental design.6−8 Extracellular .... Poiseuille equation. Probes that did not display this relations...
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Development of µ-low-flow-push-pull perfusion probes for sampling from mouse hippocampal tissue slices Marissa R. Cabay, Alyssa McRay, David E. Featherstone, and Scott A. Shippy ACS Chem. Neurosci., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.7b00277 • Publication Date (Web): 27 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 29, 2017

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ACS Chemical Neuroscience

Development of µ-low-flow-push-pull perfusion probes for ex vivo sampling from mouse hippocampal tissue slices

Marissa R. Cabay,† Alyssa McRay,‡§ David E. Featherstone,‡§│ and Scott A. Shippy*†‡



University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Chemistry, Chicago, Illinois 60607



University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Biological Sciences, Chicago, Illlinois 60607

§

University of Illinois at Chicago, Laboratory of Integrated Neurosciences, Chicago, Illinois

60607 │

Deceased January 28, 2017

Corresponding Author:

Scott A. Shippy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Depart of Chemistry, M/C 111, 845 W Taylor ST., Rm 4500, Chicago, IL 60607 United States. Phone: 312-355-2426 Fax: 312-996-0431 E-mail: [email protected]

Keywords: neurotransmitters, amino acids, hippocampal tissue slices, low-flow- push-pull perfusion, microdialysis, capillary electrophoresis

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ACS Chemical Neuroscience

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Graphical Abstract:

ABSTRACT This work demonstrates a reduced tip µ-low-flow-push-pull perfusion technique for ex vivo sampling of the extracellular space of mouse hippocampal brain slices. Concentric fused-silica capillary probes are pulled by an in-house gravity puller with a butane flame producing probe tips averaging an overall outer diameter of 30.3 ± 8 µm. The 10-30 nL/min perfusion flow rate through the probe generates an average recovery of 90%. Sampling was performed with mouse brain tissue slices to characterize basal neurotransmitter content in this model system. Samples were collected from hippocampal tissue slices at a volume of 200 nL per sample. Sample arginine, histamine, lysine, glycine, glutamate, and aspartate content was quantified by micellar electrokinetic chromatography with LED induced fluorescence detection. Primary amine content was sampled over several hours to determine evidence for tissue damage and loss of extracellular content from the tissue slice. Overall, all amino acid concentrations trended lower as an effect of time relative to tissue slicing. There were significant concentration decreases seen for histamine, lysine, and aspartate between time points 0-2 and 2-6 hours (p