Determination of extracellular bicarbonate and carbon dioxide concentrations in brain slices using carbonate and pH-selective microelectrodes
The extracellular pH of the brain is subject to shifts during neural activity. To understand these pH changes, it is necessary to measure [H +], [HCO 3 −], [CO 3 2−] and [CO 2]. In principle, this can be accomplished using CO 3 2− and pH-sensitive microelectrodes; however, interference from HCO 3 −...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neuroscience methods 1994-08, Vol.53 (2), p.129-136 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The extracellular pH of the brain is subject to shifts during neural activity. To understand these pH changes, it is necessary to measure [H
+], [HCO
3
−], [CO
3
2−] and [CO
2]. In principle, this can be accomplished using CO
3
2− and pH-sensitive microelectrodes; however, interference from HCO
3
− and Cl
−, and physiological changes in [HCO
3
−], complicate measurements with CO
3
2− electrodes. Calibration requires knowledge of slope response, interference constants and corrections for [HCO
3
−] shifts. We show that when [HCO
3
−] is altered at constant [CO
2] in the absence of Cl
−, the HCO
3 interference cancels and the Nikolsky equation reduces to the Nernst equation for CO
3
−. Measurement of CO
3
− slope response by this method yielded a value of 28.5 ± 0.72 mV per decade change in [CO
3
2−]. In Cl
−-containing solutions, interference coefficients for HCO
3
− and Cl
− were determined by altering [HCO
3] at constant [CO
2], changing [CO
2] at constant [HCO
3], then solving the simultaneous Nikolsky equations for each transition. The mean interference constants corresponded to selectivity ratios of 245:1 and 1150:1 for CO
3
2− over HCO
3
− and Cl
− respectively. To correct for possible changes in [HCO
3
2−], the equilibrium relation between CO
3
2 and HCO
3
− was substituted into the Nikolsky equation to yield an equation in [CO
3
2−] and [H
+]. By simultaneously measuring shifts in [H
+] with a pH microelectrode, this equation is readily solved for [CO
3
2−]. These methods were tested by measuring [HCO
3
−] and [CO
2] in experimental solutions, and in the extracellular fluid of rat hippocampal slices. |
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ISSN: | 0165-0270 1872-678X |
DOI: | 10.1016/0165-0270(94)90169-4 |