© 2017 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Laser-scanning optical microscopes generally do not control the polarization of the exciting laser field. We show that laser polarization and imaging mode (confocal versus two photon) exert a profound influence on the ability to detect Ca 2+ changes in both cultured neurons and living myelin. With two-photon excitation, increasing ellipticity resulted in a ≈50% reduction in resting X-Rhod-1 fluorescence in homogeneous bulk solution, cell cytoplasm, and myelin. In contrast, varying the angle of a linearly polarized laser field only had appreciable effects on dyes that partitioned into myelin in an ordered manner. During injury-induced Ca 2+ increases, larger ellipticities resulted in a significantly greater injury-induced signal increase in neurons, and particularly in myelin. Indeed, the traditional method of measuring Ca 2+ changes using one-photon confocal mode with linearly polarized continuous wave laser illumination produced no appreciable X-Rhod-1 signal increase in ischemic myelin, compared to a robust 50% fluorescence increase with two-photon excitation and optimized ellipticity with the identical injury paradigm. This underscores the differences in one- versus two-photon excitation and, in particular, the under-appreciated effects of laser polarization on the behavior of certain Ca 2+ reporters, which may lead to substantial underestimates of the real Ca 2+ fluctuations in various cellular compartments.
CITATION STYLE
Micu, I., Brideau, C., Lu, L., & Stys, P. K. (2017). Effects of laser polarization on responses of the fluorescent Ca 2+ indicator X-Rhod-1 in neurons and myelin. Neurophotonics, 4(2), 025002. https://doi.org/10.1117/1.nph.4.2.025002
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.