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Fluorescence lifetime imaging of propranolol uptake in living glial C6 cells

Bisby, RH; Botchway, SW; Crisostomo, AG; Parker, AW; Scherer, KM

Authors

RH Bisby

SW Botchway

AG Crisostomo

AW Parker

KM Scherer



Abstract

Uptake of the β-blocker drug propranolol by living glial C6 cells has been observed using fluorescence lifetime imaging with two-photon excitation at 630 nm. Both uptake and release of propranolol occur within minutes and are temperature dependent, being about 5 times faster at 37 °C than at 20 °C. The intracellular fluorescence lifetime of propranolol is generally shorter than the value of 9.8 ns determined in dilute neutral aqueous solution and the difference is ascribed to concentration quenching. Within the cells propranolol is accumulated within intracellular acidic vesicles and the cytoplasm, but is excluded from the cell nucleus. On incubation of cells in medium containing 100 M propranolol, the drug is accumulated to reach intracellular concentrations up to 10 mM in a process that is believed to be driven by protonation within acidic cellular compartments.

Citation

Bisby, R., Botchway, S., Crisostomo, A., Parker, A., & Scherer, K. (2012). Fluorescence lifetime imaging of propranolol uptake in living glial C6 cells. Journal of Spectroscopy, 27(5-6), 533-540. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/518353

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Jul 31, 2015
Journal Spectroscopy : An International Journal
Print ISSN 2314-4920
Electronic ISSN 2314-4939
Publisher Hindawi
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 27
Issue 5-6
Pages 533-540
DOI https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/518353
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/518353
Related Public URLs http://www.hindawi.com/journals/jspec/



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