2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(22e) Imaging Healthy and Diseased Striatal Dopamine Release with Near-Infrared Catecholamine Nanosensors
Here, we implement the near-infrared fluorescent catecholamine nanosensors (nIRCats) to image dopamine release within the brain striatum of R6/2 Huntingtonâs Disease Model (R6/2) mice. We have previously shown that these near-infrared fluorescent, polymer-functionalized semiconducting single wall carbon nanotubes serve as adept dopamine sensors in the basal ganglia, exhibiting ÎF/F of up to 24-fold in the fluorescence emission window of 1000-1300 nm, a wavelength ideal for imaging in optically scattering brain tissue1. Furthermore, the chemically synthetic molecular recognition elements of nIRCats readily allows imaging of dopamine dynamics in diseased tissues or tissues that have undergone treatment via novel therapy without the need for additional genetic manipulation or mouse-line development. These unique properties of nIRCat make it an ideal tool to study the dysregulation of dopamine over the course of Huntingtonâs Disease and subsequent treatment. We demonstrate that nIRCats imaging in R6/2 Mice ex vivo brain slices before and after the onset of motor symptoms reveal insights into possible mechanisms of dopamine decrease with Huntingtonâs Disease motor symptom development. These findings provide a framework to understand how the diseased brain adapts to disease progression and subsequent treatment, and underscore the utility of nIRCats as a versatile new optical tool for dopamine detection in the brain.
- Beyene, A. G., Delevich, K. et al. "Imaging Striatal Dopamine Release Using a Non-Genetically Encoded Near-Infrared Fluorescent Catecholamine Nanosensor." Science Advances, 5 (7) (2019).