Literature DB >> 27622924

Quantitative Chemical Measurements of Vesicular Transmitters with Electrochemical Cytometry.

Xianchan Li1, Johan Dunevall2, Andrew G Ewing1,2.   

Abstract

Electrochemical cytometry adds a new dimension to our ability to study the chemistry and chemical storage of transmitter molecules stored in nanometer vesicles. The approach involves the adsorption and subsequent rupture of vesicles on an electrode surface during which the electroactive contents are quantitatively oxidized (or reduced). The measured current allows us to count the number of molecules in the vesicles using Faraday's law and to correlate this to the amount of molecules released when single exocytosis events take place at communicating cells. The original format for this method involved a capillary electrophoresis separation step to singly address each vesicle, but we have more recently discovered that cellular vesicles tend to adsorb to carbon electrodes and spontaneously as well as stochastically rupture to give mostly single vesicle events. This approach, called impact electrochemical cytometry, even though the impact is perhaps not the important part of this process, has been studied and the vesicle rupture appears to be at the interface between the vesicle and the electrode and is probably driven by electroporation. The pore size and rate of content electrolysis are a function of the pore diameter and the presence of a protein core in the vesicles. In model liposomes with no protein, events appear extremely rapidly as the soft nanoparticles impact the electrode and the contents are oxidized. It appears that the proteins decorating the surface of the vesicle are important in maintaining a gap from the electrode and when this gap is closed electroporation takes place. Models of the event response times suggest the pores formed are small enough so we can carry out these measurements at nanotip electrodes and we have used this to quantify the vesicle content in living cells in a mode we call intracellular impact electrochemical cytometry. The development of electrochemical cytometry allows comparison between vesicle content and vesicular release and we have found that only part of the vesicle content is released in typical exocytotic cases measured by amperometry. This has led to the novel hypothesis that most exocytosis from dense core vesicles is via mechanism where vesicles fuse with the cell membrane, some content is released and then close again to be reloaded and reused. It leaves open the possibility that cells regulate release during individual events. This might be important in learning and memory and be a nonreceptor pharmaceutical target for brain-related disorders. Indeed, the concept of the chemo-brain observed in cisplatin-treated cancer patients appears to be at least in part the result of changing the fraction of transmitter released and we have been able to show this by using the combined amperometric measurement of release and electrochemical cytometry at model cells.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27622924     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00331

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  25 in total

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2.  Optical Tracking of Nanometer-Scale Cellular Membrane Deformation Associated with Single Vesicle Release.

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3.  Zinc Regulates Chemical-Transmitter Storage in Nanometer Vesicles and Exocytosis Dynamics as Measured by Amperometry.

Authors:  Lin Ren; Masoumeh Dowlatshahi Pour; Soodabeh Majdi; Xianchan Li; Per Malmberg; Andrew G Ewing
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2017-03-20       Impact factor: 15.336

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5.  Plasticity in exocytosis revealed through the effects of repetitive stimuli affect the content of nanometer vesicles and the fraction of transmitter released.

Authors:  Chaoyi Gu; Anna Larsson; Andrew G Ewing
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-09-30       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Single Entity Electrochemistry in Nanopore Electrode Arrays: Ion Transport Meets Electron Transfer in Confined Geometries.

Authors:  Kaiyu Fu; Seung-Ryong Kwon; Donghoon Han; Paul W Bohn
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2020-01-28       Impact factor: 22.384

7.  Vesicle impact electrochemical cytometry compared to amperometric exocytosis measurements.

Authors:  Johan Dunevall; Soodabeh Majdi; Anna Larsson; Andrew Ewing
Journal:  Curr Opin Electrochem       Date:  2017-07-14

8.  Visualization of Membrane Pore in Live Cells Reveals a Dynamic-Pore Theory Governing Fusion and Endocytosis.

Authors:  Wonchul Shin; Lihao Ge; Gianvito Arpino; Seth A Villarreal; Edaeni Hamid; Huisheng Liu; Wei-Dong Zhao; Peter J Wen; Hsueh-Cheng Chiang; Ling-Gang Wu
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2018-04-05       Impact factor: 41.582

9.  3D-Printed Carbon Nanoelectrodes for In Vivo Neurotransmitter Sensing.

Authors:  Qun Cao; Mimi Shin; Nickolay V Lavrik; B Jill Venton
Journal:  Nano Lett       Date:  2020-08-26       Impact factor: 11.189

10.  Single cell amperometry reveals curcuminoids modulate the release of neurotransmitters during exocytosis from PC12 cells.

Authors:  Xianchan Li; Amir Saeid Mohammadi; Andrew G Ewing
Journal:  J Electroanal Chem (Lausanne)       Date:  2016-10-13       Impact factor: 4.464

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