In-vivo evaluation of the permeability of the blood-brain barrier to arsenicals, molybdate, and methylmercury by use of online microdialysis-packed minicolumn-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry

Su, CK; Yang, CH; Lin, CH; Sun, YC

HERO ID

2088486

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

24162822

HERO ID 2088486
In Press No
Year 2014
Title In-vivo evaluation of the permeability of the blood-brain barrier to arsenicals, molybdate, and methylmercury by use of online microdialysis-packed minicolumn-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry
Authors Su, CK; Yang, CH; Lin, CH; Sun, YC
Journal Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
Volume 406
Issue 1
Page Numbers 239-247
Abstract To study the permeability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to arsenates, arsenite, monomethylarsonic acid (MMA), dimethylarsinic acid (DMA), molybdate, and methylmercury, and the transfer behavior of these species, we constructed an automatic online analytical system comprising a microdialysis sampling device, a minicolumn packed with nonfunctionalized poly(vinyl chloride) beads, and an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer for continuous in-vivo measurement of their dynamic variation in the extracellular space of the brains of living rats. By using ion-polymer interactions as a novel working mechanism for sample pretreatment of volume-limited microdialysate, we simplified the operating procedure of conventional solid-phase extraction and reduced the contribution to the blank of the chemicals used. After optimizing this hyphenated system, we measured its performance by analysis of NIST standard reference materials 1640a (trace elements in natural water) and 2672a (trace elements in human urine) and by in-vivo monitoring of the dynamic variation of the compounds tested in the extracellular fluid (ECF) of rat brain. We found that intraperitoneal administration led to observable BBB permeability of arsenates, arsenite, DMA, MMA, and molybdate. Nevertheless, the limited sensitivity of the system and the size of microdialysis samples meant that detection of MeHg in ECF remained problematic, even when we administered a dose of 20 mg MeHg kg(-1) body weight. On the basis of these practical demonstrations, we suggest that our analytical system could be used not only for dynamic monitoring of the transfer kinetics of the four arsenicals and molybdate in the rat brain but also to describe associated neurotoxicity in terms of exposure to toxic metals and their species.
Doi 10.1007/s00216-013-7429-5
Pmid 24162822
Wosid WOS:000329092900024
Url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84892954573&doi=10.1007%2fs00216-013-7429-5&partnerID=40&md5=50556969d2c79d950201ccb7665e44f1
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Blood-brain barrier permeability; In-vivo microdialysis; Packed minicolumn; Solid-phase extraction; ICP-MS