1 research outputs found
Physiologically Relevant Changes in Serotonin Resolved by Fast Microdialysis
Online
microdialysis is a sampling and detection method that enables continuous
interrogation of extracellular molecules in freely moving subjects
under behaviorally relevant conditions. A majority of recent publications
using brain microdialysis in rodents report sample collection times
of 20–30 min. These long sampling times are due, in part, to
limitations in the detection sensitivity of high performance liquid
chromatography (HPLC). By optimizing separation and detection conditions,
we decreased the retention time of serotonin to 2.5 min and the detection
threshold to 0.8 fmol. Sampling times were consequently reduced from
20 to 3 min per sample for online detection of serotonin (and dopamine)
in brain dialysates using a commercial HPLC system. We developed a
strategy to collect and to analyze dialysate samples continuously
from two animals in tandem using the same instrument. Improvements
in temporal resolution enabled elucidation of rapid changes in extracellular
serotonin levels associated with mild stress and circadian rhythms.
These dynamics would be difficult or impossible to differentiate using
conventional microdialysis sampling rates