| Literature DB >> 30603656 |
Carlos A Gómez1, Buyin Fu1, Sava Sakadžić1, Mohammad A Yaseen1.
Abstract
Disruptions and alterations to cerebral energy metabolism play a vital role in the onset and progression of many neurodegenerative disorders and cerebral pathologies. In order to precisely understand the complex alterations underlying Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression, in vivo imaging at the microscopic level is required in preclinical animal models. Utilizing two-photon fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy and the phasor analysis method, we have observed AD-related variations of endogenous fluorescence of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) in vivo. We collected NADH FLIM images from the cerebral cortices of both APPswe:PS1dE9 mice to model amyloid β plaque accumulation and corresponding age-matched wildtype controls. Distinct variations in NADH fluorescence lifetime between wildtype and AD mice, as well as variations related to proximity from amyloid plaques, are obvervable via the phasor method. The combination of NADH FLIM and phasor analysis allows for a minimally invasive, high-resolution technique to characterize the adverse effects of amyloid β accumulation on mitochondrial energy metabolism and could guide our understanding of preclinical AD pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cerebral metabolism; fluorescence lifetime imaging; microscopy; phasors
Year: 2018 PMID: 30603656 PMCID: PMC6307680 DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.5.4.045008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurophotonics ISSN: 2329-423X Impact factor: 3.593
Fig. 1Intensity image of (a) endogenous NADH fluorescence and (b) corresponding fluorecence of topically applied trypan blue, collected in vivo from cortical tissue of an AD mouse model with different morphological features outlined: yellow, amyloid plaque; teal, lipofuscin deposits; and magenta, cortical blood vessel. These features were masked for to isolate parenchymal NADH.
Fig. 2Phasor clusters for the parenchymal NADH and lipofuscin collected from AD mice and wildtype controls, and computed Bhattacharyya distances () of each cluster. The NADH phasor clusters of measurements taken near plaques appear well separated, suggesting that phasors can be reliably used to distinguish -related differences in cerebral metabolism. Lipofuscin measurements of wildtype mice appear distant from AD mouse measurements, although imply similarity.
Fig. 3(a) Intensity image of an amyloid plaque and the surrounding cortical tissue with red delineated ROIs. All ROIs are equidistant from each other. (b) Corresponding phasor clusters of the plaque (violet) and the eight cortical tissue ROIs. A distinct gradient is seen in the clusters’ centroids, varying with distance from the plaque.