Boussommier-Calleja Alexandra, Li Guorong, Wilson Amanda, Ziskind Tal, Scinteie Oana Elena, Ashpole Nicole E, Sherwood Joseph M, Farsiu Sina, Challa Pratap, Gonzalez Pedro, Downs J Crawford, Ethier C Ross, Stamer W Daniel, Overby Darryl R
Department of Bioengineering Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Ophthalmology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2015 Dec;56(13):8331-9. doi: 10.1167/iovs.15-17106.
Mice are commonly used to study conventional outflow physiology. This study examined how physical factors (hydration, temperature, and anterior chamber [AC] deepening) influence ocular perfusion measurements in mice.
Outflow facility (C) and pressure-independent outflow (Fu) were assessed by multilevel constant pressure perfusion of enucleated eyes from C57BL/6 mice. To examine the effect of hydration, seven eyes were perfused at room temperature, either immersed to the limbus in saline and covered with wet tissue paper or exposed to room air. Temperature effects were examined in 12 eyes immersed in saline at 20 °C or 35 °C. Anterior chamber deepening was examined in 10 eyes with the cannula tip placed in the anterior versus posterior chamber (PC). Posterior bowing of the iris (AC deepening) was visualized by three-dimensional histology in perfusion-fixed C57BL/6 eyes and by spectral-domain optical coherence tomography in living CD1 mice.
Exposure to room air did not significantly affect C, but led to a nonzero Fu that was significantly reduced upon immersion in saline. Increasing temperature from 20 °C to 35 °C increased C by 2.5-fold, more than could be explained by viscosity changes alone (1.4-fold). Perfusion via the AC, but not the PC, led to posterior iris bowing and increased outflow.
Insufficient hydration contributes to the appearance of pressure-independent outflow in enucleated mouse eyes. Despite the large lens, AC deepening may artifactually increase outflow in mice. Temperature-dependent metabolic processes appear to influence conventional outflow regulation. Physical factors should be carefully controlled in any outflow studies involving mice.
小鼠常用于研究传统的房水流出生理学。本研究探讨了物理因素(水合作用、温度和前房[AC]加深)如何影响小鼠的眼灌注测量。
通过对C57BL/6小鼠摘除的眼球进行多级恒压灌注来评估房水流出系数(C)和压力无关性流出(Fu)。为了研究水合作用的影响,七只眼睛在室温下进行灌注,要么将眼球浸入盐水中至角膜缘并覆盖湿纸巾,要么暴露于室内空气中。在12只分别浸入20℃或35℃盐水中的眼睛中研究温度的影响。在10只将插管尖端置于前房与后房(PC)的眼睛中研究前房加深的影响。通过对灌注固定的C57BL/6眼睛进行三维组织学检查以及对活体CD1小鼠进行光谱域光学相干断层扫描来观察虹膜后凸(前房加深)情况。
暴露于室内空气对C没有显著影响,但导致了一个非零的Fu,在浸入盐水中后Fu显著降低。温度从20℃升高到35℃使C增加了2.5倍,这一增加幅度超过了仅由粘度变化所解释的幅度(1.4倍)。通过前房而非后房进行灌注会导致虹膜后凸并增加房水流出。
水合作用不足导致摘除的小鼠眼球出现压力无关性流出。尽管晶状体较大,但前房加深可能会人为地增加小鼠的房水流出。温度依赖性代谢过程似乎会影响传统的房水流出调节。在任何涉及小鼠的房水流出研究中,都应仔细控制物理因素。