Potentiometric-scanning ion conductance microscopy for measurement at tight junctions

Tissue Barriers. 2013 Oct 1;1(4):e25585. doi: 10.4161/tisb.25585. Epub 2013 Aug 9.

Abstract

Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy (SICM) has been developed originally for high-resolution imaging of topographic features. Recently, we have described a hybrid voltage scanning mode of SICM, termed Potentiometric-SICM (P-SICM) for recording transmembrane ionic conductance at specific nanostructures of synthetic and biological interfaces. With this technique, paracellular conductance through tight junctions - a subcellular structure that has been difficult to interrogate previously - has been realized. P-SICM utilizes a dual-barrel pipet to differentiate paracellular from transcellular transport processes with nanoscale spatial resolution. The unique combination of voltage scanning and topographic imaging enables P-SICM to capture paracellular conductance within a nominal radius of several hundred nanometers. This review summarizes recent advances in paracellular conductance recording with an emphasis on the P-SICM based approach, which is applied to detect claudin-2 mediated permeability changes at the tight junction.

Keywords: SICM; claudin; epithelium; ion channel; patch clamp; tight junction.

Publication types

  • Review