Co-reporter:Sam V. Kaplan, Ryan A. Limbocker, Rachel C. Gehringer, Jenny L. Divis, Gregory L. Osterhaus, Maxwell D. Newby, Michael J. Sofis, David P. Jarmolowicz, Brooke D. Newman, Tiffany A. Mathews, and Michael A. Johnson
ACS Chemical Neuroscience 2016 Volume 7(Issue 6) pp:689
Publication Date(Web):May 4, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acschemneuro.5b00029
Chemotherapy-induced cognitive impairment, known also as “chemobrain”, is a medical complication of cancer treatment that is characterized by a general decline in cognition affecting visual and verbal memory, attention, complex problem solving skills, and motor function. It is estimated that one-third of patients who undergo chemotherapy treatment will experience cognitive impairment. Alterations in the release and uptake of dopamine and serotonin, central nervous system neurotransmitters that play important roles in cognition, could potentially contribute to impaired intellectual performance in those impacted by chemobrain. To investigate how chemotherapy treatment affects these systems, fast-scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV) at carbon-fiber microelectrodes was used to measure dopamine and serotonin release and uptake in coronal brain slices containing the striatum and dorsal raphe nucleus, respectively. Measurements were taken from rats treated weekly with selected doses of carboplatin and from control rats treated with saline. Modeling the stimulated dopamine release plots revealed an impairment of dopamine release per stimulus pulse (80% of saline control at 5 mg/kg and 58% at 20 mg/kg) after 4 weeks of carboplatin treatment. Moreover, Vmax, the maximum uptake rate of dopamine, was also decreased (55% of saline control at 5 mg/kg and 57% at 20 mg/kg). Nevertheless, overall dopamine content, measured in striatal brain lysates by high performance liquid chromatography, and reserve pool dopamine, measured by FSCV after pharmacological manipulation, did not significantly change, suggesting that chemotherapy treatment selectively impairs the dopamine release and uptake processes. Similarly, serotonin release upon electrical stimulation was impaired (45% of saline control at 20 mg/kg). Measurements of spatial learning discrimination were taken throughout the treatment period and carboplatin was found to alter cognition. These studies support the need for additional neurochemical and behavioral analyses to identify the underlying mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced cognitive disorders.Keywords: Carboplatin; chemobrain; chemotherapy; dopamine; fast-scan cyclic voltammetry; reserve pool; serotonin
Co-reporter:Mimi Shin, Sam V. Kaplan, Kayla D. Raider and Michael A. Johnson
Analyst 2015 vol. 140(Issue 9) pp:3039-3047
Publication Date(Web):10 Mar 2015
DOI:10.1039/C4AN02007C
Caged compounds have been used extensively to investigate neuronal function in a variety of preparations, including cell culture, ex vivo tissue samples, and in vivo. As a first step toward electrochemically measuring the extent of caged compound photoactivation while also measuring the release of the catecholamine neurotransmitter, dopamine, fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fiber microelectrodes (FSCV) was used to electrochemically characterize 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (4HPAA) in the absence and presence of dopamine. 4HPAA is a by-product formed during the process of photoactivation of p-hydroxyphenacyl-based caged compounds, such as p-hydroxyphenylglutamate (pHP-Glu). Our data suggest that the oxidation of 4HPAA occurs through the formation of a conjugated species. Moreover, we found that a triangular waveform of −0.4 V to +1.3 V to −0.4 V at 600 V s−1, repeated every 100 ms, provided an oxidation current of 4HPAA that was enhanced with a limit of detection of 100 nM, while also allowing the detection and quantitation of dopamine within the same scan. Along with quantifying 4HPAA in biological preparations, the results from this work will allow the electrochemical measurement of photoactivation reactions that generate 4HPAA as a by-product as well as provide a framework for measuring the photorelease of electroactive by-products from caged compounds that incorporate other chromophores.
Co-reporter:Meng Sun and Michael A. Johnson
RSC Advances 2015 vol. 5(Issue 69) pp:55633-55639
Publication Date(Web):18 Jun 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5RA06479A
Antioxidants play a role in counteracting free radicals and reactive oxygen species and are thought to help prevent or slow the progression of many chronic diseases, such as cancer, diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases, and neurodegenerative diseases. Herein we report a simple way to make a colorimetric assay for measuring total antioxidant capacity (TAC) on craft paper-based analytical devices (cPADs) suitable for sub-μL volume blood samples. We incorporated a microfluidic separation mechanism for the isolation of plasma from interfering blood cells. The whole diagnostic process, including cPAD construction, plasma sample preparation, assay, and image thresholding analysis, can be completed in fifteen minutes. We applied our approach to the measurement of TAC in mice that model Huntington's disease (HD), a fatal, neurodegenerative movement disorder. Results revealed that TAC was significantly elevated in R6/2 HD model mice compared to their age-matched wild-type (WT) controls. We expect that this method, with a simple, fast, and sensitive assay on low-cost and disposable paper, will meet the potential needs for point-of-care (POC) testing of TAC, as well as other disease biomarkers in blood and other types of bodily fluids where limited volumes of samples are obtainable.
Co-reporter:Meng Sun, Sam V. Kaplan, Rachel C. Gehringer, Ryan A. Limbocker, and Michael A. Johnson
Analytical Chemistry 2014 Volume 86(Issue 9) pp:4151
Publication Date(Web):April 16, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ac5008927
The use of fast scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV) to measure the release and uptake of dopamine (DA) as well as other biogenic molecules in viable brain tissue slices has gained popularity over the last 2 decades. Brain slices have the advantage of maintaining the functional three-dimensional architecture of the neuronal network while also allowing researchers to obtain multiple sets of measurements from a single animal. In this work, we describe a simple, easy-to-fabricate perfusion device designed to focally deliver pharmacological agents to brain slices. The device incorporates a microfluidic channel that runs under the perfusion bath and a microcapillary that supplies fluid from this channel up to the slice. We measured electrically evoked DA release in brain slices before and after the administration of two dopaminergic stimulants, cocaine and GBR-12909. Measurements were collected at two locations, one directly over and the other 500 μm away from the capillary opening. Using this approach, the controlled delivery of drugs to a confined region of the brain slice and the application of this chamber to FSCV measurements, were demonstrated. Moreover, the consumption of drugs was reduced to tens of microliters, which is thousands of times less than traditional perfusion methods. We expect that this simply fabricated device will be useful in providing spatially resolved delivery of drugs with minimum consumption for voltammetric and electrophysiological studies of a variety of biological tissues both in vitro and ex vivo.
Co-reporter:Jenny L. Fulks, Bliss E. O’Bryhim, Sara K. Wenzel, Stephen C. Fowler, Elena Vorontsova, Jonathan W. Pinkston, Andrea N. Ortiz, and Michael A. Johnson
ACS Chemical Neuroscience 2010 Volume 1(Issue 10) pp:679
Publication Date(Web):August 3, 2010
DOI:10.1021/cn100032f
In this study, we evaluated the relationship between amphetamine-induced behavioral alterations and dopamine release and uptake characteristics in Fmr1 knockout (Fmr1 KO) mice, which model fragile X syndrome. The behavioral analyses, obtained at millisecond temporal resolution and 2 mm spatial resolution using a force-plate actometer, revealed that Fmr1 KO mice express a lower degree of focused stereotypy compared with wild-type (WT) control mice after injection with 10 mg/kg (ip) amphetamine. To identify potentially related neurochemical mechanisms underlying this phenomenon, we measured electrically evoked dopamine release and uptake using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fiber microelectrodes in striatal brain slices. At 10 weeks of age, dopamine release per pulse, which is dopamine release corrected for differences in uptake, was unchanged. However, at 15 (the age of behavioral testing) and 20 weeks of age, dopamine per pulse and the maximum rate of dopamine uptake was diminished in Fmr1 KO mice compared with WT mice. Dopamine uptake measurements, obtained at different amphetamine concentrations, indicated that dopamine transporters in both genotypes have equal affinities for amphetamine. Moreover, dopamine release measurements from slices treated with quinpirole, a D2-family receptor agonist, rule out enhanced D2 autoreceptor sensitivity as a mechanism of release inhibition. However, dopamine release, uncorrected for uptake and normalized against the corresponding predrug release peaks, increased in Fmr1 KO mice, but not in WT mice. Collectively, these data are consistent with a scenario in which a decrease in extracellular dopamine levels in the striatum result in diminished expression of focused stereotypy in Fmr1 KO mice.Keywords (keywords): amphetamine; dopamine; focused stereotypy; Fragile X syndrome; striatum; voltammetry
Co-reporter:Andrea N. Ortiz;Benjamin J. Kurth;Gregory L. Osterhaus
Journal of Neurochemistry 2010 Volume 112( Issue 3) pp:755-761
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1111/j.1471-4159.2009.06501.x
J. Neurochem. (2010) 112, 755–761.
Abstract
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a fatal, neurodegenerative movement disorder characterized by preferential and extensive striatal degeneration. Here, we used fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to study the mobilization and efflux of reserve pool dopamine (DA) in striatal brain slices from HD model R6/2 mice. When applying stimulus trains of 120 pulses, evoked DA release in wild-type (WT) slices was greater than that in R6/2 slices at the higher frequencies (50 and 60 Hz). To quantify cytosolic and reserve pool DA levels, amphetamine-induced DA efflux was measured after pre-treatment with either tetrabenazine or alpha-methyl-p-tyrosine. Slices from 12-week-old R6/2 mice released less DA than slices from WT mice, while no difference was noted in slices from 6-week old mice. The vesicular release of reserve pool DA, mobilized by treatment with cocaine, was shorter lived in R6/2 slices compared with WT slices even though peak DA release was the same. Moreover, the number of DA reserve pool vesicles in R6/2 mice was less than half of that in WT. Therefore, our data suggest that the same number of DA molecules are present in each reserve pool vesicle in WT and R6/2 mice and that these vesicles are readily mobilized in both genotypes; however, R6/2 mice have fewer DA reserve pool vesicles available for mobilization.