Abstract

In order to understand how energy metabolism adapts to changes in neuronal activity it is imperative to perform direct measurements of the flux of glucose (and other metabolites) in brain tissue. Metabolic studies using brain slice preparations are attractive due to the controllability of recording conditions, absence of anesthetic interference and refined animal experimental protocols. In this work, taking advantage of the small size and versatility of carbon fiber microelectrodes (CFMs), we aimed to develop an amperometric glucose microbiosensor suitable for glucose measurement in brain slices. Potentiostatic- or galvanostatic-driven platinum electrodeposition was used to improve the analytical properties of CFMs towards detection of hydrogen peroxide. The platinized CFMs served as platform for the development of glucose microbiosensors through the immobilization of glucose-oxidase (GOx) by cross-linking with glutaraldehyde in the presence of BSA. Selective glucose measurements were attained by modifying the electrode with a permselective layer of meta-phenylenediamine and by integrating a null sensor. The in vitro characterization studies support the good analytical features of the CFM/Pt-based microbiosensors to reliably measure glucose in brain tissue. The ex vivo experiments in rodent hippocampal slices validated their suitability to measure evoked changes in extracellular glucose. This approach, encompassing the use of null sensor to cross-check the selectivity on a moment-to-moment basis, allowed us to provide the temporal and quantitative profile of extracellular glucose changes in hippocampal slices following a spreading depolarization event.Overall, these results support the potential of these microbiosensors to be used as a valuable tool to investigate the complex nature of glucose utilization in brain tissue linked to neuronal activation both in physiological and pathological conditions.

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