Periodic Photobleaching with Structured Illumination for Diffusion Imaging.


Journal

Analytical chemistry
ISSN: 1520-6882
Titre abrégé: Anal Chem
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0370536

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
31 Jan 2023
Historique:
pubmed: 20 1 2023
medline: 20 1 2023
entrez: 19 1 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The use of periodically structured illumination coupled with spatial Fourier-transform fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FT-FRAP) was shown to support diffusivity mapping within segmented domains of arbitrary shape. Periodic "comb-bleach" patterning of the excitation beam during photobleaching encoded spatial maps of diffusion onto harmonic peaks in the spatial Fourier transform. Diffusion manifests as a simple exponential decay of a given harmonic, improving the signal to noise ratio and simplifying mathematical analysis. Image segmentation prior to Fourier transformation was shown to support pooling for signal to noise enhancement for regions of arbitrary shape expected to exhibit similar diffusivity within a domain. Following proof-of-concept analyses based on simulations with known ground-truth maps, diffusion imaging by FT-FRAP was used to map spatially-resolved diffusion differences within phase-separated domains of model amorphous solid dispersion spin-cast thin films. Notably, multi-harmonic analysis by FT-FRAP was able to definitively discriminate and quantify the roles of internal diffusion and exchange to higher mobility interfacial layers in modeling the recovery kinetics within thin amorphous/amorphous phase-separated domains, with interfacial diffusion playing a critical role in recovery. These results have direct implications for the design of amorphous systems for stable storage and efficacious delivery of therapeutic molecules.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36656303
doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02950
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

2192-2202

Auteurs

Ziyi Cao (Z)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Dustin M Harmon (DM)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Ruochen Yang (R)

Department of Industrial and Physical Pharmacy, Purdue University, 575 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Aleksandr Razumtcev (A)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Minghe Li (M)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Mark S Carlsen (MS)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Andreas C Geiger (AC)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Dmitry Zemlyanov (D)

Birck Nanotechnology Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Alex M Sherman (AM)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Nita Takanti (N)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Jiayue Rong (J)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Yechan Hwang (Y)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Lynne S Taylor (LS)

Department of Industrial and Physical Pharmacy, Purdue University, 575 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Garth J Simpson (GJ)

Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, Indiana47907, United States.

Classifications MeSH