Real-time measurements of endogenous CO production from vascular cells using an ultrasensitive laser sensor

Author:

Morimoto Yuji12,Durante William3,Lancaster David G.14,Klattenhoff Jens1,Tittel Frank K.1

Affiliation:

1. Rice Quantum Institute, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77251;

2. Department of Medical Engineering, National Defense Medical College, Tokorozawa, Saitama 359-8513, Japan; and

3. Departments of Medicine and Pharmacology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030;

4. Defense Science and Technology Organization, 205 Labs, Salisbury, South Australia, Australia 5108

Abstract

Carbon monoxide (CO) has been implicated as a biological messenger molecule analogous to nitric oxide. A compact gas sensor based on a midinfrared laser absorption spectroscopy was developed for direct and real-time measurement of trace levels (in approximate pmol) of CO release by vascular cells. The midinfrared light is generated by difference frequency mixing of two nearinfrared lasers in a nonlinear optical crystal. A strong infrared absorption line of CO (4.61 μm) is chosen for convenient CO detection without interference from other gas species. The generation of CO from cultured vascular smooth muscle cells was detected every 20 s without any chemical modification to the CO. The sensitivity of the sensor reached 6.9 pmol CO. CO synthesis was measured from untreated control cells (0.25 nmol per 107cells/h), sodium nitroprusside-treated cells (0.29 nmol per 107cells/h), and hemin-treated cells (0.49 nmol per 107cells/h). The sensor also detected decreases in CO production after the addition of the heme oxygenase (HO) inhibitor tin protoporphyrin-IX (from 0.49 to 0.02 nmol per 107cells/h) and increases after the administration of the HO substrate hemin (from 0.27 to 0.64 nmol per 107cells/h). These results demonstrate that midinfrared laser absorption spectroscopy is a useful technique for the noninvasive and real-time detection of trace levels of CO from biological tissues.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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