| Literature DB >> 31358851 |
Mark Gardner1,2,3, Alexandra McCarron4,5,6, Kaye Morgan7,8,9, David Parsons4,5,6, Martin Donnelley4,5,6.
Abstract
We have previously developed non-invasive in vivo mucociliary transport (MCT) monitoring methods using synchrotron phase contrast X-ray imaging (PCXI) to evaluate potential therapies for cystic fibrosis (CF). However, previous in vivo measurements of MCT velocity using this method were lower than those from alternate methods. We hypothesise this was due to the surface chemistry of the uncoated particles. We investigated the effect of particle surface coating on MCT marker performance by measuring the velocity of uncoated, positively-charged (aminated; NH2), and negatively-charged (carboxylated; COOH) particles. The effect of aerosolised hypertonic saline (HS) was also investigated, as previous in vivo measurements showed HS significantly increased MCT rate. PCXI experiments were performed using an ex vivo rat tracheal imaging setup. Prior to aerosol delivery there was little movement of the uncoated particles, whilst the NH2 and COOH particles moved with MCT rates similar to those previously reported. After application of HS the uncoated and COOH particle velocity increased and NH2 decreased. This experiment validated the use of COOH particles as MCT marker particles over the uncoated and NH2 coated particles. Our results suggest that future experiments measuring MCT using synchrotron PCXI should use COOH coated marker particles for more accurate MCT quantification.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31358851 PMCID: PMC6662859 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-47465-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Average MCT rate of the different particles overtime (Mean ± SEM). Stationary particles were not included in this analysis. Timepoint 0 minutes indicates when the hypertonic saline was applied. Particle coating groups were no coating control (n = 6), COOH coating (n = 10) or NH2 coating (n = 5). Statistical analysis was conducted using a two-way reapeated measurements ANOVA with significance 0.05, with Tukey corrections for multiple comparisons. F values for time, treatment, and time vs treatment interaction were 0.9512, 2.636 and 0.4133 respectively *COOH > No Coating (p < 0.05),**COOH > No Coating (p < 0.0001), ^COOH > NH2 (p < 0.05), ^^COOH > NH2 (p < 0.001).
Figure 2Maximum number of particles that were detected as moving (a) and expressed as a percentage of total particles detected in each frame (b). No significance reported between different groups. Statistical analysis was conducted using multiple t-tests with adjusted p-values using the Holm-Sidak method with significance p = 0.05.
Figure 3Distribution of the different measured particle velocity for the different particle coatings. Statistical outliers are indicated by the red crosses and are defined as q3 + 1.5 × IQR where q3 is the 75th percentile and IQR is the interquartile range.
Figure 4Velocity heat-map of the particles with no coating for the different time points where the particle velocity was analysed. The heat-map orientation matches the physical orientation of the trachea in the tissue bath, with the larynx to the left and lung to the right. Stationary particles are at the axis origin, slowly moving particles are close to the origin, and faster moving particles are further away. The angular position represents the particle direction of motion. Red and brown indicates more particles than yellow or blue.
Figure 6Velocity heat-map of the NH2 coated particles for the different time points where the particle velocity was analysed.
Figure 5Velocity heat-map of the COOH coated particles for the different time points where the particle velocity was analysed.
Figure 7(a) Excised trachea placement in the Living Systems water bath. (b) Webcam image of the tissue bath on the sample stage in the imaging hutch. Note the PBS in the bottom of the bath, and the HS aerosol coming out of the right side of the bath during imaging.