Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.

Calcium-imaging is a sensitive method for monitoring calcium dynamics during neuronal activity. As intracellular calcium concentration is correlated to physiological and pathophysiological activity of neurons, calcium imaging with fluorescent indicators is one of the most commonly used techniques in...

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Main Authors: Morven Cameron, Orsolya Kékesi, John W Morley, Jonathan Tapson, Paul P Breen, André van Schaik, Yossi Buskila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4868260?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a09d0eb2e9964edbabf3de5507f43cbb2020-11-24T21:40:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01115e015546810.1371/journal.pone.0155468Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.Morven CameronOrsolya KékesiJohn W MorleyJonathan TapsonPaul P BreenAndré van SchaikYossi BuskilaCalcium-imaging is a sensitive method for monitoring calcium dynamics during neuronal activity. As intracellular calcium concentration is correlated to physiological and pathophysiological activity of neurons, calcium imaging with fluorescent indicators is one of the most commonly used techniques in neuroscience today. Current methodologies for loading calcium dyes into the tissue require prolonged incubation time (45-150 min), in addition to dissection and recovery time after the slicing procedure. This prolonged incubation curtails experimental time, as tissue is typically maintained for 6-8 hours after slicing. Using a recently introduced recovery chamber that extends the viability of acute brain slices to more than 24 hours, we tested the effectiveness of calcium AM staining following long incubation periods post cell loading and its impact on the functional properties of calcium signals in acute brain slices and wholemount retinae. We show that calcium dyes remain within cells and are fully functional >24 hours after loading. Moreover, the calcium dynamics recorded >24 hrs were similar to the calcium signals recorded in fresh tissue that was incubated for <4 hrs. These results indicate that long exposure of calcium AM dyes to the intracellular cytoplasm did not alter the intracellular calcium concentration, the functional range of the dye or viability of the neurons. This data extends our previous work showing that a custom recovery chamber can extend the viability of neuronal tissue, and reliable data for both electrophysiology and imaging can be obtained >24hrs after dissection. These methods will not only extend experimental time for those using acute neuronal tissue, but also may reduce the number of animals required to complete experimental goals.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4868260?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Morven Cameron
Orsolya Kékesi
John W Morley
Jonathan Tapson
Paul P Breen
André van Schaik
Yossi Buskila
spellingShingle Morven Cameron
Orsolya Kékesi
John W Morley
Jonathan Tapson
Paul P Breen
André van Schaik
Yossi Buskila
Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Morven Cameron
Orsolya Kékesi
John W Morley
Jonathan Tapson
Paul P Breen
André van Schaik
Yossi Buskila
author_sort Morven Cameron
title Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
title_short Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
title_full Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
title_fullStr Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
title_full_unstemmed Calcium Imaging of AM Dyes Following Prolonged Incubation in Acute Neuronal Tissue.
title_sort calcium imaging of am dyes following prolonged incubation in acute neuronal tissue.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Calcium-imaging is a sensitive method for monitoring calcium dynamics during neuronal activity. As intracellular calcium concentration is correlated to physiological and pathophysiological activity of neurons, calcium imaging with fluorescent indicators is one of the most commonly used techniques in neuroscience today. Current methodologies for loading calcium dyes into the tissue require prolonged incubation time (45-150 min), in addition to dissection and recovery time after the slicing procedure. This prolonged incubation curtails experimental time, as tissue is typically maintained for 6-8 hours after slicing. Using a recently introduced recovery chamber that extends the viability of acute brain slices to more than 24 hours, we tested the effectiveness of calcium AM staining following long incubation periods post cell loading and its impact on the functional properties of calcium signals in acute brain slices and wholemount retinae. We show that calcium dyes remain within cells and are fully functional >24 hours after loading. Moreover, the calcium dynamics recorded >24 hrs were similar to the calcium signals recorded in fresh tissue that was incubated for <4 hrs. These results indicate that long exposure of calcium AM dyes to the intracellular cytoplasm did not alter the intracellular calcium concentration, the functional range of the dye or viability of the neurons. This data extends our previous work showing that a custom recovery chamber can extend the viability of neuronal tissue, and reliable data for both electrophysiology and imaging can be obtained >24hrs after dissection. These methods will not only extend experimental time for those using acute neuronal tissue, but also may reduce the number of animals required to complete experimental goals.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4868260?pdf=render
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