| Literature DB >> 35311215 |
Masahiro Fukuda1,2, Takayoshi Matsumura3,4, Toshio Suda1,4, Hajime Hirase5.
Abstract
Significance: Photothrombosis is a widely used model of ischemic stroke in rodent experiments. In the photothrombosis model, the photosensitizer rose bengal (RB) is systemically introduced into the blood stream and activated by green light to induce aggregation of platelets that eventually cause vessel occlusion. Since the activation of RB is a one-photon phenomenon and the molecules in the illuminated area (light path) are subject to excitation, targeting of thrombosis is unspecific, especially in the depth dimension. We developed a photothrombosis protocol that can target a single vessel in the cortical parenchyma by two-photon excitation. Aim: We aim to induce a thrombotic stroke in the cortical parenchyma by two-photon activation of RB to confine photothrombosis within a vessel of a target depth. Approach: FITC-dextran is injected into the blood stream to visualize the cerebral blood flow in anesthetized adult mice with a cranial window. After a target vessel is chosen by two-photon imaging (950 nm), RB is injected into the blood stream. The scanning wavelength is changed to 720 nm, and photothrombosis is induced by scanning the target vessel.Entities:
Keywords: cortex; ischemia; mice; multiphoton; photothrombosis; stroke
Year: 2022 PMID: 35311215 PMCID: PMC8929553 DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurophotonics ISSN: 2329-423X Impact factor: 4.212
Fig. 1In vivo two-photon DTPT: (a) schematic illustration of DTPT. After visualization of blood vessels with FITC-dextran, a blood vessel containing RB is targeted by two-photon excitation. (b) Blood vessels to be targeted were chosen using FITC-dextran fluorescence. (c) Following RB injection, the excitation wavelength was switched to 720 nm. Imaging of the targeted blood vessel with 720 nm wavelength was performed until coagulation was formed. (d) Completion of occlusion could be distinguished by photobleaching of RB and FITC. (e) In a small number of cases, blood vessel rupture or tissue burning was observed. (f) The success rate of DTPT was , whereas of the cases were not occluded (no change) and of the cases had tissue burning/rupture (occlusion: 84/99, no change: 6/99, tissue burning/rupture 9/99 vessels, 4 mice). (g) Controls with FITC-150k dextran only did not show occlusion or tissue burning/rupture in 150 s (103 blood vessels, 3 mice). Scale bars: (a) and (b)–(e): . Occlusion of a single cortical vessel by DTPT. Scale bar . (Video 1, MP4, 7 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910.1]).
Fig. 2Parameters for successful DTPT: (a) distribution of vessel diameter for successfully occluded vessels versus not occluded vessels. (b) Distribution of time since RB injection for successfully occluded vessels versus not occluded vessels. *. (c) Scatter plot showing the relationship between irradiation time and vessel diameter for successfully occluded vessels.
Fig. 3Off-target effect of DTPT is negligible: (a) the blood vessel located at from the pia was targeted. (b) Occlusion was formed in 40 s using 300-mW 720-nm excitation laser. (c) After DTPT, the excitation was set to 950 nm, and coagulation was visualized. (d) Even using 300 mW excitation for DTPT, there was no occlusion/coagulation in areas 300, 200, above and below the target. (e) Extravasation of FITC-150k dextran and occlusion of peripheral blood vessels were observed three days after DTPT. Scale bars: (a), (c), (d) and (b), (e) . Occlusion of the vessel corresponding to (b). Scale bar . (Video 2, MP4, 5 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910.2]). Depth stack of the cortical vasculature around the DTPT target site corresponding to this figure (Video 3, MP4, 12 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910.3]) and Fig. S1 in the Supplementary Material (upper panel, Video 4, MP4, 4 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910.4]) and (lower panel, Video 5, MP4, 5 MB [URL: https://doi.org/10.1117/1.NPh.9.2.021910.5]). Scale bar .