Publication | Open Access
Multicolor Fluorescence Imaging of Traumatic Brain Injury in a Cryolesion Mouse Model
43
Citations
35
References
2012
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryEngineeringPss-794 LocalizationBiomedical EngineeringTissue ImagingClinical InjuryBiomedical OpticCryolesion Mouse ModelBrain InjuryNeurologyTranslational Molecular ImagingMolecular ImagingBiophysicsNovel Imaging MethodMulticolor Fluorescence ImagingIn Vivo SystemCell BiologyTracer DyeBiomedical ImagingNeuroscienceMedicine
Traumatic brain injury is characterized by initial tissue damage, which then can lead to secondary processes such as cell death and blood-brain-barrier disruption. Clinical and preclinical studies of traumatic brain injury typically employ anatomical imaging techniques and there is a need for new molecular imaging methods that provide complementary biochemical information. Here, we assess the ability of a targeted, near-infrared fluorescent probe, named PSS-794, to detect cell death in a brain cryolesion mouse model that replicates certain features of traumatic brain injury. In short, the model involves brief contact of a cold rod to the head of a living, anesthetized mouse. Using noninvasive whole-body fluorescence imaging, PSS-794 permitted visualization of the cryolesion in the living animal. Ex vivo imaging and histological analysis confirmed PSS-794 localization to site of brain cell death. The nontargeted, deep-red Tracer-653 was validated as a tracer dye for monitoring blood-brain-barrier disruption, and a binary mixture of PSS-794 and Tracer-653 was employed for multicolor imaging of cell death and blood-brain-barrier permeability in a single animal. The imaging data indicates that at 3 days after brain cryoinjury the amount of cell death had decreased significantly, but the integrity of the blood-brain-barrier was still impaired; at 7 days, the blood-brain-barrier was still three times more permeable than before cryoinjury.
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