Microinjections
Today we learned how to prepare and deliver microinjections
to the rats’ PBN. There is a very
elaborate process that goes into prepping.
First, the microinjectors are sterilized and flushed. They are very fragile and expensive, so it is
important to be careful. The plunger
must be pulled out slowly and should not exceed the 1.0μL mark (0.9
μL is a good amount). The
microinjector is filled with ethanol and then injects the ethanol into the
waste beaker 3-5 times. It is then
filled with water and injects the water into the waste beaker 6-10 times. This ensures that there is not leftover
ethanol injecting into the rats’ brains.
The microinjectors are inserted comfortably into the injector machines
(the right and left microinjector should be inserted into the proper side). A syringe is then filled with water and releases
the water into the tube several times.
There should be no air bubbles.
The syringe is then removed, and the microinjector is inserted into the
tube. Again, there should be no air
bubbles. Clay can be used to hold the tubes
when they are not in use. When one of
the two drugs (treatment: CDP control: aCSF) is ready to be injected into the
rat’s PBN, an air bubble is formed in the tube before the specified drug is
sucked up into the tube of both the right and left side. During this time, I have removed the rat’s dummies
and will paint the left dummy tip with nail polish to differentiate it from the
right. The injectors on the tip of the
tubes are inserted into the correct cannula.
The injector machine inserts 0.2μL
of the drug into the rat’s PBN per minute. After the drug has been injected into the PBN,
we wait two minutes while the injector sits into the cannula. Then we remove the injector and screw back in
the dummies. The rats are placed in an
assigned cage in the testing room, are given a specific flavor of liquid to
drink, and their licks are recorded in a 60 minute time period. We also replaced their cages with a new one
for when they complete the experiment.
We tested the water restricted rats using an ABBA within subjects
design. The tubes were cleaned again
after the second microinjection and then at the end of the experiment. The cages in the testing room were wiped
using an antibacterial wipe and dried using a paper towel after each trial. Notes are made for each rat.
Difficulties
There were three difficulties. One was having enough skill and good eyesight
to place the dummies back into the cannulae of squirming rats. The second was that one rat did not lick the
baby bottle at all. This was one of the
same rats that did not lick the bottle during training. A third difficulty was that one rat had scratched
and irritated his head, so he had to be run in a separate trial by himself
after he was cleaned up.
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