Evaluating ultrastructural preservation quality in banked brain tissue.

Q3 Medicine
Free neuropathology Pub Date : 2025-06-25 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.17879/freeneuropathology-2025-6763
Macy Garrood, Alicia Keberle, Allison Sowa, William Janssen, Emma L Thorn, Claudia De Sanctis, Kurt Farrell, John F Crary, Andrew T McKenzie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The ultrastructural analysis of postmortem brain tissue can provide important insights into cellular architecture and disease-related changes. For example, connectomics studies offer a powerful emerging approach for understanding neural circuit organization. However, electron microscopy (EM) data is difficult to interpret when the preservation quality is imperfect, which is common in brain banking and may render it unsuitable for certain research applications. One common issue is that EM images of postmortem brain tissue can have an expansion of regions that appear to be made up of extracellular space and / or degraded cellular material, which we call ambiguous interstitial zones. In this study, we report a method to assess whether EM images have ambiguous interstitial zone artifacts in a cohort of 10 postmortem brains with samples from each of the cortex and thalamus. Next, in matched samples from the contralateral hemisphere of the same brains, we evaluate the structural preservation quality of light microscopy images, including immunostaining for cytoskeletal proteins. Through this analysis, we show that on light microscopy, cell membrane morphology can be largely maintained, and neurite trajectory visualized over micrometer distances, even in specimens for which there are ambiguous interstitial zone artifacts on EM. Additionally, we demonstrate that synaptic structures can be successfully traced across serial EM sections in some postmortem samples, indicating the potential for connectivity studies in banked human brain tissue when appropriate preservation and visualization protocols are employed. Taken together, our analysis may assist in maximizing the usefulness of donated brain tissue by informing tissue selection and preparation protocols for various research goals.

评价储存脑组织超微结构保存质量。
死后脑组织的超微结构分析可以为细胞结构和疾病相关变化提供重要的见解。例如,连接组学研究为理解神经回路组织提供了一种强有力的新兴方法。然而,当保存质量不完善时,电子显微镜(EM)数据难以解释,这在脑库中很常见,可能使其不适合某些研究应用。一个常见的问题是,死后脑组织的EM图像可能有一个扩张的区域,似乎是由细胞外空间和/或降解的细胞物质组成的,我们称之为模糊间质区。在这项研究中,我们报告了一种方法来评估10个死后大脑的EM图像是否有模糊的间质带伪影,其中包括皮层和丘脑的样本。接下来,在来自同一大脑对侧半球的匹配样本中,我们评估了光学显微镜图像的结构保存质量,包括细胞骨架蛋白的免疫染色。通过这一分析,我们表明,在光镜下,细胞膜形态可以在很大程度上保持,神经突轨迹在微米距离上可见,即使在EM上有模糊的间隙带伪影的标本中也是如此。此外,我们证明,突触结构可以在一些死后样本的连续EM切片中成功地追踪到。当采用适当的保存和可视化协议时,表明在储存的人脑组织中进行连接研究的潜力。综上所述,我们的分析可以通过为各种研究目标提供组织选择和准备方案来帮助最大限度地发挥捐赠脑组织的效用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
3 weeks
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