Transcranial Recording of Electrophysiological Neural Activity in the Rodent Brain in vivo Using Functional Photoacoustic Imaging of Near-Infrared Voltage-Sensitive Dye

  • Jeeun Kang
  • , Haichong K. Zhang
  • , Shilpa D. Kadam
  • , Julie Fedorko
  • , Heather Valentine
  • , Adarsha P. Malla
  • , Ping Yan
  • , Maged M. Harraz
  • , Jin U. Kang
  • , Arman Rahmim
  • , Albert Gjedde
  • , Leslie M. Loew
  • , Dean F. Wong
  • , Emad M. Boctor

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

39 Scopus citations

Abstract

Minimally-invasive monitoring of electrophysiological neural activities in real-time—that enables quantification of neural functions without a need for invasive craniotomy and the longer time constants of fMRI and PET—presents a very challenging yet significant task for neuroimaging. In this paper, we present in vivo functional PA (fPA) imaging of chemoconvulsant rat seizure model with intact scalp using a fluorescence quenching-based cyanine voltage-sensitive dye (VSD) characterized by a lipid vesicle model mimicking different levels of membrane potential variation. The framework also involves use of a near-infrared VSD delivered through the blood-brain barrier (BBB), opened by pharmacological modulation of adenosine receptor signaling. Our normalized time-frequency analysis presented in vivo VSD response in the seizure group significantly distinguishable from those of the control groups at sub-mm spatial resolution. Electroencephalogram (EEG) recording confirmed the changes of severity and frequency of brain activities, induced by chemoconvulsant seizures of the rat brain. The findings demonstrate that the near-infrared fPA VSD imaging is a promising tool for in vivo recording of brain activities through intact scalp, which would pave a way to its future translation in real time human brain imaging.

Original languageEnglish
Article number579
JournalFrontiers in Neuroscience
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 9 2019

Keywords

  • near-infrared
  • neuroimaging
  • photoacoustic
  • seizure
  • transcranial
  • voltage-sensitive dye

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