Animal experiments
The animal experiments were performed in accordance with Polish and European regulations, and were approved by the Ethical Committee of the Medical College, Jagiellonian University in Krakow (Decision No. 129/2014). The rats were provided by the Animal Breeding Farm of the Faculty of Pharmacy, the Medical College, Jagiellonian University in Krakow. Male Wistar rats (240–260 g) were housed under standard laboratory conditions with a natural day-night cycle, a temperature of 22 °C, the humidity at 55 ± 5 %, and with free access to food and water.
The animals were randomly divided into 4 groups. For acute studies a single dose (equivalent to 6 mg Ti/kg body weight) of a solution of titanium citrate (prepared by the procedure described by Deng et al. (2004) was administered intravenously (i.v.) to 6 rats, and they were then euthanized 30 min (n = 3) and 180 min (n = 3) after the injection. In the multiple dose studies a group of 3 rats was given a daily dose of 6 mg Ti/kg body weight by gavage (p.o.) for 30 days. The control rats (n = 3) received water without titanium citrate.
At the indicated time points (acute studies) or 24 h after the last oral dose (chronic studies), the rats were deeply anesthetized with thiopental (75 mg/kg b.w., intraperitoneal injection) and euthanized. Samples of liver, kidneys and spleen were collected and immediately frozen.
Samples preparation
For µ-SRXRF measurements the samples were mounted on the cryotome head with Shandon Cryomatrix (Thermo Electron Corporation, Pittsburgh, USA), frozen to −20 °C, cut using a Cryotome FSE cryostat (Thermo Scientific, UK) into 25 µm thick sections and mounted immediately onto a 4 µm thick Ultralene foil (SPEX, CertiPrep, USA) stretched on a PMMA ring. Afterwards, the slices were freeze-dried at −80 °C (3 days), −30 °C (1 day) and 4 °C (1 day). Then they were stored in desiccators at room temperature.
µ-SRXRF analysis
The imaging of the elemental distribution of elements in thin freeze-dried slices of organs was done with the use of a micro synchrotron radiation-induced X-ray fluorescence (µ-SRXRF) technique. The experiment was conducted at the FLUO bending-magnet beamline of the ANKA synchrotron laboratory at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Karlsruhe (Germany). All measurements were carried out at a standard 45°/45° geometry. The primary beam of 10 keV photons was shaped with the use of slits—the output beam size was 250 µm (V) × 177 µm (H). Secondary radiation from the sample was collected with a KETEK silicon drift detector with a 50 mm2 active area. The flux of the primary beam was monitored with the use of an ionisation chamber and then used for normalisation of the acquired data. Analysed samples were mounted on a motorised X–Y–Z stage. The step size of the scan was the same in both directions and was equal to 250 µm. The average scanning area varied from 85 mm2 for spleen to 210 mm2 for liver. The counting time per pixel varied from 2 s for spleen and kidney to 3 s for liver.
Data analysis
All spectra were processed in the batch mode of AXIL software from the QXAS package (Bernasconi et al. 1996).
The calibration of sensitivity of the spectrometer was done with the use of thin-film standards with certified mass deposit per unit area: multielemental (NIST SRM 1831) and single compound standards of KI, Cu, Fe, Ti, Zn (Micromatter, Canada). The calibration was done in order to recalculate the measured X-ray fluorescence intensity into mass deposits per unit area with the use of the external standard method. All tissue samples were treated as thin samples, which is justified for elements above chlorine for employed thickness of sections (Szczerbowska-Boruchowska et al. 2012).
The mass deposits per unit area were calculated with following formula:
$$M_{d,x,y,i} = \frac{{I_{x,y,i} }}{{I_{std,i} }}M_{d,std,i}$$
where \(M_{d,x,y,i}\) is mass deposit per unit area of \(i\)-th element in a pixel with \(x,y\) coordinates, \(\,I_{x,y,i}\) is normalized X-ray fluorescence intensity if \(i\)-th element in a pixel with \(x,y\) coordinates, \(I_{std,i}\) is a X-ray fluorescence intensity if \(i\)-th element measured for standard sample and \(M_{d,std,i}\) is certified mass deposit per unit area of standard sample.
The inter-element correlations were calculated on the basis of mass deposits per unit area, and prior to this operation all pixels outside the tissue were removed. A Pearson’s correlation analysis was applied to this dataset. Because tissue samples were treated as thin samples, correlations with Cl and elements below it (P, S) were not taken into account.