microautoradiography
Microautoradiography is a microscopic imaging technique that couples autoradiography with microscopic observation to determine the spatial distribution of radioisotopes at cellular or subcellular resolution. The method was developed in the 1940s to trace the uptake of radionuclide-labelled compounds in biological tissues. By exposing a thin tissue or cell section to a photographic emulsion, the beta or gamma emissions from the radioisotopes expose silver halide crystals. After development, the resulting silver grains appear as dark particles overlaying the specimen, indicating the positions of the labeled molecules.
In practice, a freshly prepared thin section—typically 4 to 10 µm thick—is laid on a microscope slide
Applications of microautoradiography span numerous fields, including neurobiology for mapping neurotransmitter uptake, pharmacology for visualizing drug
The principal advantage of microautoradiography is its ability to provide direct, quantitative spatial information on radioisotope