Ex-vivo Electrochemical pH Mapping of the Gastrointestinal Tract in the Absence and Presence of Pharmacological Agents

20 May 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Ex-vivo pH profiling of the upper gastrointestinal (GI) tract (of a mouse) in both the absence and presence of pharmacological agents aimed at altering acid/bicarbonate production, is reported using an electrochemical pH probe, for the first time. Three pH electrodes were assessed for suitability using a GI tract biological mimic buffer solution containing 0.5 % mucin. These include a traditional glass pH probe, an iridium oxide (IrOx) coated electrode (both potentiometric) and a quinone (Q) surface-integrated boron doped diamond (BDD-Q) electrode (voltammetric). In mucin the timescale for both IrOx and glass to obtain stable pH readings was in the ~100’s of s, most likely due to mucin adsorption, in contrast to 6 s with the BDD-Q electrode. Both the glass and IrOx pH electrodes were also compromised on robustness due to fragility and delamination (IrOx); contact with the GI tissue was an experimental requirement. BDD-Q was deemed the most appropriate. Ten measurements were made along the GI tract, esophagus (1), stomach (5) and duodenum (4). Under untreated conditions (buffer only), the BDD-Q probe tracked the pH from neutral in the esophagus, to acidic in the stomach and rising to more alkaline in the duodenum. In the presence of omeprazole, a proton pump inhibitor, the body regions of the stomach exhibited elevated pH levels. Under melatonin treatment (a bicarbonate agonist and acid inhibitor), both the body of the stomach and the duodenum showed elevated pH levels. This study demonstrates the versatility of the BDD-Q pH electrode for real-time ex-vivo biological tissue measurements.

Keywords

pH
gastrointestinal tract
ex-vivo
tissue activity
Proton Pump Inhibitor
boron doped diamond electrode

Supplementary materials

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Mucin-pH paper SI v5 FINAL
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