An ultrasensitive polarity-specific two-photon probe for revealing autophagy in live cells during scrap leather-induced neuroinflammation process.
Tianyu LiangTaotao QiangLongfang RenBaoshuai WangWei HuPublished in: The Analyst (2021)
A polarity-sensitive fluorescence probe AMN was developed to demonstrate the role of autophagy inhibitory drugs in the process of leather residue-induced neuroinflammation, promoting the knowledge of the relationship between autophagy and neuroinflammation. AMN showed a turn-on fluorescent signal in the process of autophagy inhibition via two-photon confocal imaging, which is different from the current popular autophagy probes. Therefore, AMN can offer high-sensitive imaging analysis of the autophagy inhibition process to better understand the role of autophagy in the process of neuroinflammation. The model of scrap leather-induced neuroinflammation using PC12 cells demonstrated that neuroinflammation can induce autophagy by releasing reactive oxygen species (ROS), and autophagy can alleviate neuroinflammation significantly via ROS scavenging.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- traumatic brain injury
- induced apoptosis
- living cells
- lps induced
- reactive oxygen species
- cognitive impairment
- diabetic rats
- healthcare
- high resolution
- quantum dots
- cerebral ischemia
- dna damage
- inflammatory response
- drug induced
- brain injury
- sensitive detection
- fluorescence imaging
- stress induced
- optical coherence tomography
- molecularly imprinted