Long-Term Tracking and Dynamically Quantifying of Reversible Changes of Extracellular Ca2+ in Multiple Brain Regions of Freely Moving Animals

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Abstract

Understanding physiological and pathological processes in the brain requires tracking the reversible changes in chemical signals with long-term stability. We developed a new anti-biofouling microfiber array to real-time quantify extracellular Ca2+ concentrations together with neuron activity across many regions in the mammalian brain for 60 days, in which the signal degradation was < ca. 8 %. The microarray with high tempo-spatial resolution (ca. 10 μm, ca. 1.3 s) was implanted into 7 brain regions of free-moving mice to monitor reversible changes of extracellular Ca2+ upon ischemia-reperfusion processes. The changing sequence and rate of Ca2+ in 7 brain regions were different during the stroke. ROS scavenger could protect Ca2+ influx and neuronal activity after stroke, suggesting the significant influence of ROS on Ca2+ overload and neuron death. We demonstrated this microarray is a versatile tool for investigating brain dynamic during pathological processes and drug treatment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)14429-14437
Number of pages9
JournalAngewandte Chemie - International Edition
Volume60
Issue number26
DOIs
StatePublished - 21 Jun 2021

Keywords

  • anti-biofouling
  • brain
  • microfiber arrays
  • reversibility
  • stroke

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