| Literature DB >> 24670476 |
Hanane Kadar1, Hoa Pham2, David Touboul3, Alain Brunelle4, Olivier Baud5.
Abstract
Despite advances in neonatal intensive care leading to an increased survival rate in preterm infants, brain lesions and subsequent neurological handicaps following preterm birth remain a critical issue. To prevent brain injury and/or enhance repair, one of the most promising therapies investigated in preclinical models is inhaled nitric oxide (iNO). We have assessed the effect of this therapy on brain lipid content in air- and iNO-exposed rat pups by mass spectrometry imaging using a time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) method. This technique was used to map the variations in lipid composition of the rat brain and, particularly, of the white matter. Triplicate analysis showed a significant increase of sulfatides (25%-50%) in the white matter on Day 10 of life in iNO-exposed animals from Day 0-7 of life. These robust, repeatable and semi-quantitative data demonstrate a potent effect of iNO at the molecular level.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24670476 PMCID: PMC4013560 DOI: 10.3390/ijms15045233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1.Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) negative ion images of coronal rat brain half sections. (a) and (b): m/z 806.5 (ST C18) ion; (c) and (d): m/z 822.5 (ST C18-OH) ion. These images have been obtained from different rat half brains at postnatal age P10. (a) and (c): air-exposed rat; (b) and (d): iNO-exposed rat. Primary ions: Bi3+, 9.5 × 109 ions cm−2; areas varying from 7 mm × 9.5 mm to 8 mm × 11 mm. The maximum number of counts (MC) corresponds to the amplitude of the color scale, and the total counts (TC) are the total number of counts recorded for the specified m/z (this is the sum of counts in all the pixels).
Figure 2.TOF-SIMS mass spectra (m/z range 240–440) of areas corresponding to the white matter of P10 rat brain tissue sections. (A) air-exposed rat; (B) iNO-exposed rat.
Figure 3.TOF-SIMS mass spectra (m/z range 770–910) of areas corresponding to the white matter of P10 rat brain tissue sections. (A) air-exposed rat; (B) iNO-exposed rat.
Assignments of the compounds studied, including complete name, abbreviations, class and sub-class membership, formula, mass spectrometric diagnostic species, calculated and measured values of m/z and error in parts per million of the detected [M-H]− ion species.
| Species | Abbreviations | Formula | Calculated | Experimental | Error (ppm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/16:0) | ST C16 | C40H76SNO11 | 778.51 | 778.52 | 13 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/2-OH-16:0) | ST C16-OH | C40H76SNO12 | 794.51 | 794.53 | 25 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/18:0) | ST C18 | C42H80SNO11 | 806.54 | 806.54 | 0 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/2-OH-18:0) | ST C18-OH | C42H80SNO12 | 822.54 | 822.55 | 12 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/20:0) | ST C20 | C44H84SNO11 | 834.57 | 834.55 | −24 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/2-OH-20:0) | ST C20-OH | C44H84SNO12 | 850.57 | 850.56 | −12 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/22:0) | ST C22 | C46H88SNO11 | 862.61 | 862.60 | −12 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/2-OH-22:0) | ST C22-OH | C46H88SNO12 | 878.60 | 878.59 | −11 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/24:0) | ST C24 | C48H92SNO11 | 890.64 | 890.62 | −22 |
| (3′-Sulf)Galβ-Cer(d18:1/2-OH-24:0) | ST C24-OH | C46H92SNO12 | 906.63 | 906.61 | −22 |
Figure 4.Mean relative intensities of 10 sulfatide ion peaks (non-hydroxylated and hydroxylated) and their sum calculated from a triplicate analysis of P10 rat brain tissues (exposed to air and iNO; n = 6 in each experimental group) with their standard deviations. A Student’s test with a confidence interval of 0.05 showed the significant difference between the two groups and for each ion (* for p-value ≤ 0.05, ** for p-value ≤ 0.01).