The most common initial treatment received by patients with a brain tumour is surgical removal of the growth. Precise histopathological diagnosis of brain tumours is to some extent subjective. Furthermore, currently available diagnostic imaging techniques to delineate the excision border during cytoreductive surgery lack the required spatial precision to aid surgeons. We set out to determine whether infrared (IR) and/or Raman spectroscopy combined with multivariate analysis could be applied to discriminate between normal brain tissue and different tumour types (meningioma, glioma and brain metastasis) based on the unique spectral "fingerprints" of their biochemical composition. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue blocks of normal brain and different brain tumours were de-waxed, mounted on low-E slides and desiccated before being analyzed using attenuated total reflection Fourier-transform IR (ATR-FTIR) and Raman spectroscopy. ATR-FTIR spectroscopy showed a clear segregation between normal and different tumour subtypes. Discrimination of tumour classes was also apparent with Raman spectroscopy. Further analysis of spectral data revealed changes in brain biochemical structure associated with different tumours. Decreased tentatively-assigned lipid-to-protein ratio was associated with increased tumour progression. Alteration in cholesterol esters-to-phenylalanine ratio was evident in grade IV glioma and metastatic tumours. The current study indicates that IR and/or Raman spectroscopy have the potential to provide a novel diagnostic approach in the accurate diagnosis of brain tumours and have potential for application in intra-operative diagnosis.
The influence of soil temperature on rhizome depths of four intertidal seagrass species was investigated in central Queensland, Australia. We postulated that certain intertidal seagrass species are soil temperature-sensitive and vertically stratify rhizome depths. Below-ground vertical stratification of intertidal seagrass rhizome depths was analysed based upon microclimate (soil temperature) and microhabitat (soil type). Soil temperature profiles exhibited heat transfer from surface layers to depth that varied by microhabitat, with vertical stratification of rhizome depths between species. Halodule uninervis rhizomes maintain a narrow median soil temperature envelope; compensating for high surface temperatures by occupying deeper, cooler soil substrates. Halophila decipiens, Halophila ovalis and Zostera muelleri rhizomes are shallow-rooted and exposed to fluctuating temperatures, with broader median temperature envelopes. Halodule uninervis appears to be a niche specialist, with the two Halophila species considered as generalist niche usage species. The implications of niche use based upon soil temperature profiles and rhizome rooting depths are discussed in the context of species' thermal tolerances and below-ground biomass O demand associated with respiration and maintenance of oxic microshields. This preliminary evidence suggests that soil temperature interaction with rhizome rooting depths may be a factor that influences the distribution of intertidal seagrasses.
This study evaluated the potential of deuteration to enhance the mechanistic information obtainable by biospectroscopy techniques in biological-cell models. These techniques were previously demonstrated to identify low-dose effects (≤nM) induced by test agents; this is of critical interest in terms of developing novel approaches to monitor environmentally-induced cell alterations. Attenuated total reflection Fourier-transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy was coupled with multivariate analysis to characterize a low-dose (10(-10) M) compared to a high-dose (10(-6) M) exposure of benzo[a]pyrene (B[a]P) in oestrogen-responsive MCF-7 cells; these results were used as a positive control for spectroscopic detection of B[a]P-induced effects. Deuterium oxide (D2O) was then applied as part of a fixative solution and/or at low levels incorporated into growth medium prior to ATR-FTIR spectrochemical analysis. The application of D2O as an alternative solvent in spectroscopy is widespread, but D2O has never before been applied to biospectroscopic analysis of in vitro toxicology assays. This allowed comparison between deuterated- and typically-derived IR spectra, facilitating significant insights into the effects of deuteration, and suggested that the addition of D2O to biospectroscopy assays could improve understanding of low-dose effects.
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