Abstract
Background: Study of synaptic integrity using conventional electrophysiology is a gold standard for quantitative assessment of neurodegeneration. Fluorescence assisted single-synapse long-term potentiation (FASS-LTP) provides a high throughput method to assess the synaptic integrity of neurotransmission within and between different brain regions as a measure of pharmacological efficacy in translational models. New method: We adapted the existing method to our purpose by adding a step during the thawing of frozen samples, by an extra step of placing them on a rocker at room temperature for 30 minutes immediately following thawing with constant mixing on a shaker. This allowed for gradual, uniform thawing, effectively separating the synaptosomes. Our study demonstrates FASS-LTP on four brain regions at 6- and 12-month periods in the 3xTg-AD mouse model, treating sibling cohorts with VU0155069 (a small molecule inhibitor) or vehicle (0.9 % saline). Results: Our findings demonstrate the robust ability of the FASS-LTP technique to characterize the functional synaptic integrity maintained by disease-treatment therapies in multiple brain regions longitudinally using frozen brain tissue. Comparison with existing methods: By providing a detailed, user-friendly protocol for this well-known analysis and including a recovery step improved the ability to robustly replicate the FASS-LTP between different brain regions. This may be extrapolated to a translational use on human clinical samples to improve understanding of the therapeutic impact on synaptic performance related to glutamate neurotransmission. Conclusions: FASS-LTP method offers a robust analysis of synaptosomes isolated from frozen tissue samples, demonstrating greater reproducibility in rodent and human synapses in physiological and pathological states.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 110219 |
| Journal | Journal of Neuroscience Methods |
| Volume | 409 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Sep 2024 |
Keywords
- FASS-LTP
- Flow cytometry
- Frozen brain tissues
- Glutamatergic synapse
- High throughput
- Synaptic neurotransmission
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General Neuroscience
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