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Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis

PURPOSE: To characterize the Raman spectra of porcine inner retinal layers, specifically, the inner nuclear, inner plexiform, ganglion cell, and nerve fiber layers. METHODS: Raman microscopy was employed at three excitation wavelengths, 785, 633, and 514 nm to measure Raman spectra in a high resolut...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Beattie, J. Renwick, Brockbank, Simon, McGarvey, John J., Curry, William J.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2779143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17653055
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author Beattie, J. Renwick
Brockbank, Simon
McGarvey, John J.
Curry, William J.
author_facet Beattie, J. Renwick
Brockbank, Simon
McGarvey, John J.
Curry, William J.
author_sort Beattie, J. Renwick
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To characterize the Raman spectra of porcine inner retinal layers, specifically, the inner nuclear, inner plexiform, ganglion cell, and nerve fiber layers. METHODS: Raman microscopy was employed at three excitation wavelengths, 785, 633, and 514 nm to measure Raman spectra in a high resolution grid across the inner layers of 4% paraformaldehyde cryoprotected porcine retina. Multivariate statistics were used to summarize the principal spectral signals within those layers and to map the distribution of each of those signals. RESULTS: The detected Raman scattering was dominated by a signal characteristic of the protein population present in each layer. As expected, a significant nucleotide contribution was observed in the inner nuclear layer, while the inner plexiform layer displayed a minor contribution from fatty acid based lipid, which would be characteristic of the axonal and synaptic connection resident in this layer. Blood vessels were readily characterized by their distinct heme-derived spectral signature, which increased at 633 and 514 nm excitation compared to 785 nm. Discrete isolated nucleotide signals were identified in the ganglion cell layer, while the nerve fiber layer exhibited a homogenous profile, which is indicative of its broadly uniform axonal and cytoplasmic Muller cell components. CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrated the potential of Raman microscopy as a tool to study the biochemical composition of pathologically normal retina. Specifically, the method allowed a unique method of analyzing the network of neurons involved in relaying information from the photoreceptor population to the ganglion cell derived nerve fiber layer. The study has demonstrated the ability of Raman microscopy to generate simultaneously information on a range of specific biochemical entities within the stratified normal retina.
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spelling pubmed-27791432009-11-20 Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis Beattie, J. Renwick Brockbank, Simon McGarvey, John J. Curry, William J. Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: To characterize the Raman spectra of porcine inner retinal layers, specifically, the inner nuclear, inner plexiform, ganglion cell, and nerve fiber layers. METHODS: Raman microscopy was employed at three excitation wavelengths, 785, 633, and 514 nm to measure Raman spectra in a high resolution grid across the inner layers of 4% paraformaldehyde cryoprotected porcine retina. Multivariate statistics were used to summarize the principal spectral signals within those layers and to map the distribution of each of those signals. RESULTS: The detected Raman scattering was dominated by a signal characteristic of the protein population present in each layer. As expected, a significant nucleotide contribution was observed in the inner nuclear layer, while the inner plexiform layer displayed a minor contribution from fatty acid based lipid, which would be characteristic of the axonal and synaptic connection resident in this layer. Blood vessels were readily characterized by their distinct heme-derived spectral signature, which increased at 633 and 514 nm excitation compared to 785 nm. Discrete isolated nucleotide signals were identified in the ganglion cell layer, while the nerve fiber layer exhibited a homogenous profile, which is indicative of its broadly uniform axonal and cytoplasmic Muller cell components. CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrated the potential of Raman microscopy as a tool to study the biochemical composition of pathologically normal retina. Specifically, the method allowed a unique method of analyzing the network of neurons involved in relaying information from the photoreceptor population to the ganglion cell derived nerve fiber layer. The study has demonstrated the ability of Raman microscopy to generate simultaneously information on a range of specific biochemical entities within the stratified normal retina. Molecular Vision 2007-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2779143/ /pubmed/17653055 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Beattie, J. Renwick
Brockbank, Simon
McGarvey, John J.
Curry, William J.
Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title_full Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title_fullStr Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title_full_unstemmed Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title_short Raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
title_sort raman microscopy of porcine inner retinal layers from the area centralis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2779143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17653055
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