Continual conscious bioluminescent imaging in freely moving somatotransgenic mice.
Rajvinder KardaDany P PerocheauNatalie SuffJoanne NgJuliette M K M DelhoveSuzanne M K BuckleySamantha RichardsJohn R CounsellHenrik HagbergMark R JohnsonTristan R McKaySimon N WaddingtonPublished in: Scientific reports (2017)
Luciferase bioimaging in living animals is increasingly being applied in many fields of biomedical research. Rodent imaging usually involves anaesthetising the animal during data capture, however, the biological consequences of anaesthesia have been largely overlooked. We have evaluated luciferase bioimaging in conscious, unrestrained mice after neonatal intracranial or intravascular administration of lentiviral, luciferase reporter cassettes (biosensors); we present real-time analyses from the first day of life to adulthood. Anaesthetics have been shown to exert both neurotoxic and neuroprotective effects during development and in models of brain injury. Mice subjected to bioimaging after neonatal intracranial or intravascular administration of biosensors, targeting the brain and liver retrospectively showed no significant difference in luciferase expression when conscious or unconscious throughout development. We applied conscious bioimaging to the assessment of NFκB and STAT3 transcription factor activated reporters during the earliest stages of development in living, unrestrained pups. Our data showed unique longitudinal activities for NFκB and STAT3 in the brain of conscious mice. Conscious bioimaging was applied to a neonatal mouse model of cerebral palsy (Hypoxic-Ischaemic Encephalopathy). Imaging of NFκB reporter before and after surgery showed a significant increase in luciferase expression, coinciding with secondary energy failure, in lesioned mice compared to controls.
Keyphrases
- brain injury
- high fat diet induced
- quantum dots
- high resolution
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- poor prognosis
- mouse model
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- oxidative stress
- cerebral palsy
- coronary artery
- cell proliferation
- nuclear factor
- electronic health record
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- resting state
- metabolic syndrome
- white matter
- immune response
- depressive symptoms
- long non coding rna
- dna binding
- cancer therapy
- photodynamic therapy
- artificial intelligence
- fluorescence imaging
- functional connectivity
- optical coherence tomography
- binding protein
- early life