In situ electrode calibration strategy for voltammetric measurements in vivo

JG Roberts, JV Toups, E Eyualem, GS McCarty… - Analytical …, 2013 - ACS Publications
JG Roberts, JV Toups, E Eyualem, GS McCarty, LA Sombers
Analytical chemistry, 2013ACS Publications
Technological advances have allowed background-subtracted fast-scan cyclic voltammetry
to emerge as a powerful tool for monitoring molecular fluctuations in living brain tissue;
however, there has been little progress to date in advancing electrode calibration
procedures. Variability in the performance of these handmade electrodes renders calibration
necessary for accurate quantification; however, experimental protocol makes standard
postcalibration difficult or in some cases impossible. We have developed a model that …
Technological advances have allowed background-subtracted fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to emerge as a powerful tool for monitoring molecular fluctuations in living brain tissue; however, there has been little progress to date in advancing electrode calibration procedures. Variability in the performance of these handmade electrodes renders calibration necessary for accurate quantification; however, experimental protocol makes standard postcalibration difficult or in some cases impossible. We have developed a model that utilizes information contained in the background charging current to predict electrode sensitivity to dopamine, ascorbic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and pH shifts at any point in an electrochemical experiment. Analysis determined a high correlation between predicted sensitivity and values obtained using the traditional postcalibration method, across all analytes. To validate this approach in vivo, calibration factors obtained with this model at electrodes in brain tissue were compared to values obtained at these electrodes using a traditional ex vivo calibration. Both demonstrated equal power of predictability for dopamine concentrations. This advance enables in situ electrode calibration, allowing researchers to track changes in electrode sensitivity over time and eliminating the need to generalize calibration factors between electrodes or across multiple days in an experiment.
ACS Publications