-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The concentration of extracellular calcium plays a critical role in synaptic transmission and neuronal excitability as well as other physiological processes. The time course and extent of local fluctuations in the concentration of this ion largely depend on its effective diffusion coefficient (D*) and it has been speculated that fixed negative charges on chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans (CSPGs) and other components of the extracellular matrix may influence calcium diffusion because it is a divalent cation. In this study we used ion-selective microelectrodes combined with pressure ejection or iontophoresis of ions from a micropipette to quantify diffusion characteristics of neocortex and hippocampus in rat brain slices. We show that D* for calcium is less than the value predicted from the behaviour of the monovalent cation tetramethylammonium (TMA), a commonly used diffusion probe, but D* for calcium increases in both brain regions after the slices are treated with chondroitinase ABC, an enzyme that predominantly cleaves chondroitin sulphate glycans. These results suggest that CSPGs do play a role in determining the local diffusion properties of calcium in brain tissue, most likely through electrostatic interactions mediating rapid equilibrium binding. In contrast, chondroitinase ABC does not affect either the TMA diffusion or the extracellular volume fraction, indicating that the enzyme does not alter the structure of the extracellular space and that the diffusion of small monovalent cations is not affected by CSPGs in the normal brain ionic milieu. Both calcium and CSPGs are known to have many distinct roles in brain physiology, including brain repair, and our study suggests they may be functionally coupled through calcium diffusion properties.
The Journal of Physiology 07/2009; 587(Pt 16):4029-49. · 4.72 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: There are a limited number of methods available to quantify the extracellular diffusion of macromolecules in an anisotropic brain region, e.g., an area containing numerous aligned fibers where diffusion is faster along the fibers than across. We applied the integrative optical imaging method to measure diffusion of the fluorophore Alexa Fluor 488 (molecular weight (MW) 547) and fluorophore-labeled flexible random-coil dextran polymers (dex3, MW 3000; dex75, MW 75,000; dex282, MW 282,000; dex525, MW 525,000) in the extracellular space (ECS) of the anisotropic molecular layer of the isolated turtle cerebellum. For all molecules, two-dimensional images acquired an elliptical shape with major and minor axes oriented along and across, respectively, the unmyelinated parallel fibers. The effective diffusion coefficients, D*(major) and D*(minor), decreased with molecular size. The diffusion anisotropy ratio (DAR = D*(major)/D*(minor)) increased for Alexa Fluor 488 through dex75 but then unexpectedly reached a plateau. We argue that dex282 and dex525 approach the ECS width and deform to diffuse. In support of this concept, scaling theory shows the diffusion behavior of dex282 and dex525 to be consistent with transition to a reptation regime, and estimates the average ECS width at approximately 31 nm. These findings have implications for the interstitial transport of molecules and drugs, and for modeling neurotransmitter diffusion during ectopic release and spillover.
Biophysical Journal 09/2008; 95(3):1382-92. · 3.65 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) microscopy with the combining of confocal and CARS techniques is a remarkable alternative for imaging chemical or biological specimens that neither fluoresce nor tolerate labeling. The CARS is a nonlinear optical process, the imaging properties of CARS microscopy will be very different from the conventional confocal microscopy. In this paper, we calculated the propagation of CARS signals by using the wave equation in medium and the slowly varying envelope approximation (SVEA), and find that the intensity angular distributions vary considerably with the different experimental configurations and the different specimen shapes. So the conventional description of microscopy (e.g., the point spread function) will fail to descript the imaging properties of CARS microscopy.
Aspects. 01/2005; 257258:525-534.
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: A novel method of fabricating phase-only optical filters that is based on the properties of a uniaxial crystal is proposed. With these optical filters, the phase differences are tunable among the different filter zones. Many focal patterns can be obtained if these optical filters are placed in front of a lens; furthermore, these optical filters can also be used to make up for the distortions in fabrications in which they were used only as untunable optical filters.
Applied Optics 07/2004; 43(17):3415-9. · 1.41 Impact Factor
-
[show abstract]
[hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: We study the effect of annular pupil filter which was inserted in one of the two excitation beams in two-color excitation fluorescence microscopy. By our numerical experiments, we note that the reinforced side lobes induced by annular aperture is evidently suppressed and at the same time the large-area photodetector used in two photons imaging can be used. The axial elongate along the optical axis is also decreased. However, one price that must be paid for these is inefficient use of the light source.
Optics Communications.