Abstract #3764
The Intracellular Water Preexchange Lifetime of Neurons and Astrocytes Are Different and Decrease Rapidly under Oxygen-Glucose-Deprivation Conditions
Donghan Yang 1 , James E Huettner 2 , Jeffrey J Neil 3,4 , and Joseph J Ackerman 1,5
1
Department of Chemistry, Washington
University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United
States,
2
Department
of Cell Biology & Physiology, Washington University in
St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, United States,
3
Department
of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis, St.
Louis, Missouri, United States,
4
Department
of Pediatrics, Washington University in St. Louis, St.
Louis, Missouri, United States,
5
Department
of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis, St.
Louis, Missouri, United States
The intracellular water preexchange lifetime (
IN
)
determines in what exchange regime diffusion-weighted MR
data should be interpreted. We have determined
IN
for
microbead-adherent cultures of rat cerebral cortical
neurons and astrocytes: 0.88
0.24
s for neurons and 0.66
0.17
s for astrocytes. Upon oxygen-glucose-deprivation, a
rapid
IN
decrease
was observed: 0.48
0.07
s and 0.18
0.04
s, respectively. Diffusion times used in clinical
studies of normal subjects place them in the
slow-exchange regime. The non-negligible difference
between neuron and astrocyte
IN
,
especially in injured cells, should be taken into
account in the analysis of time-scale-sensitive data.
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