Subcutaneous deuterated substrate administration in mice: An alternative to tail vein infusion

Author:

Song Kyu‐Ho1,Ge Xia1,Engelbach John A.1,Thio Liu Lin2ORCID,Neil Jeffrey J.12,Ackerman Joseph J. H.1345ORCID,Garbow Joel R.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

2. Department of Neurology Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

3. Department of Chemistry Washington University St. Louis Missouri USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

5. Department of the Alvin J Siteman Cancer Center Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTail‐vein catheterization and subsequent in‐magnet infusion is a common route of administration of deuterium (2H)‐labeled substrates in small‐animal deuterium (D) MR studies. With mice, because of the tail vein's small diameter, this procedure is challenging. It requires considerable personnel training and practice, is prone to failure, and may preclude serial studies. Motivated by the need for an alternative, the time courses for common small‐molecule deuterated substrates and downstream metabolites in brain following subcutaneous infusion were determined in mice and are presented herein.MethodsThree 2H‐labeled substrates—[6,6‐2H2]glucose, [2H3]acetate, and [3,4,4,4‐2H4]beta‐hydroxybutyrate—and 2H2O were administered to mice in‐magnet via subcutaneous catheter. Brain time courses of the substrates and downstream metabolites (and semi‐heavy water) were determined via single‐voxel DMRS.ResultsSubcutaneous catheter placement and substrate administration was readily accomplished with limited personnel training. Substrates reached pseudo‐steady state in brain within ∼30–40 min of bolus infusion. Time constants characterizing the appearance in brain of deuterated substrates or semi‐heavy water following 2H2O administration were similar (∼15 min).ConclusionAdministration of deuterated substrates via subcutaneous catheter for in vivo DMRS experiments with mice is robust, requires limited personnel training, and enables substantial dosing. It is suitable for metabolic studies where pseudo‐steady state substrate administration/accumulation is sufficient. It is particularly advantageous for serial longitudinal studies over an extended period because it avoids inevitable damage to the tail vein following multiple catheterizations.

Funder

Dravet Syndrome Foundation

Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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