화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature, Vol.383, No.6603, 823-826, 1996
Imaging of Radiocarbon Labeled Tracer Molecules in Neural Tissue Using Accelerator Mass-Spectrometry
AUTORADIOGRAPHY is widely and successfully used to image the distribution of radiolabelled tracer molecules in biological samples. The method is, however, limited in resolution and sensitivity, especially for C-14. Here we describe a new method for imaging C-14-labelled tracers in sections of biological tissue. A highly focused beam of gallium ions bombards the tissue, which is eroded (sputtered) into constituent atoms, molecules and secondary ions. The C-14 ions are detected in the secondary beam by the most sensitive method available, namely accelerator mass spectrometry(1). The specimen is scanned pixel by pixel (1 x 2 mu m), generating an image in a manner analogous to scanning electron microscopy. The method can thus be regarded as a specialized form of scanning secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), referred to here as SIAMS (ref. 2). We have used SIAMS to localize the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in thin sections of cerebral cortex, and show that it can generate C-14 images that are much improved on C-14 autoradiography. A scan takes 10-20 min and reveals individual axons, neurons and glial cells at high sensitivity. In principle, the resolution could be increased by up to tenfold, and the method could be extended to some other nuclides.