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. 2008 Oct 22:(20):964.
doi: 10.3791/964.

Pressure-polishing pipettes for improved patch-clamp recording

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Pressure-polishing pipettes for improved patch-clamp recording

Brandon E Johnson et al. J Vis Exp. .

Abstract

Pressure-polishing is a method for shaping glass pipettes for patch-clamp recording. We first developed this method for fabricating pipettes suitable for recording from small (<3 m) neuronal cell bodies. The basic principal is similar to glass-blowing and combines air pressure and heat to modify the shape of patch pipettes prepared by a conventional micropipette puller. It can be applied to so-called soft (soda lime) and hard (borosilicate) glasses. Generally speaking, pressure polishing can reduce pipette resistance by 25% without decreasing the diameter of the tip opening (Goodman and Lockery, 2000). It can be applied to virtually any type of glass and requires only the addition of a high-pressure valve and fitting to a microforge. This technique is essential for recording from ultrasmall cells (<5 m) and can also improve single-channel recording by minimizing pipette resistance. The blunt shape is also useful for perforated-patch clamp recording since this tip shape results in a larger membrane bleb available for perforation.

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References

    1. Goodman MB, Lockery SR. Pressure polishing: a method for re-shaping patch pipettes during fire polishing. . J Neurosci Methods. 2000;100:13–15. - PubMed
    1. Sutter Instrument, P-97 Pipette Cookbook. Sutter Instrument; 2008. http://www.sutter.com/contact/faqs/pipette_cookbook.pdf.

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