Literature DB >> 21629894

Chemical alterations to murine brain tissue induced by formalin fixation: implications for biospectroscopic imaging and mapping studies of disease pathogenesis.

Mark J Hackett1, James A McQuillan, Fatima El-Assaad, Jade B Aitken, Aviva Levina, David D Cohen, Rainer Siegele, Elizabeth A Carter, Georges E Grau, Nicholas H Hunt, Peter A Lay.   

Abstract

Understanding biochemical mechanisms and changes associated with disease conditions and, therefore, development of improved clinical treatments, is relying increasingly on various biochemical mapping and imaging techniques on tissue sections. However, it is essential to be able to ascertain whether the sampling used provides the full biochemical information relevant to the disease and is free from artefacts. A multi-modal micro-spectroscopic approach, including FTIR imaging and PIXE elemental mapping, has been used to study the molecular and elemental profile within cryofixed and formalin-fixed murine brain tissue sections. The results provide strong evidence that amino acids, carbohydrates, lipids, phosphates, proteins and ions, such as Cl(-) and K(+), leach from tissue sections into the aqueous fixative medium during formalin fixation of the sections. Large changes in the concentrations and distributions of most of these components are also observed by washing in PBS even for short periods. The most likely source of the chemical species lost during fixation is the extra-cellular and intra-cellular fluid of tissues. The results highlight that, at best, analysis of formalin-fixed tissues gives only part of the complete biochemical "picture" of a tissue sample. Further, this investigation has highlighted that significant lipid peroxidation/oxidation may occur during formalin fixation and that the use of standard histological fixation reagents can result in significant and differential metal contamination of different regions of tissue sections. While a consistent and reproducible fixation method may be suitable for diagnostic purposes, the findings of this study strongly question the use of formalin fixation prior to spectroscopic studies of the molecular and elemental composition of biological samples, if the primary purpose is mechanistic studies of disease pathogenesis.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21629894     DOI: 10.1039/c0an00269k

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Analyst        ISSN: 0003-2654            Impact factor:   4.616


  47 in total

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Review 4.  Analytical Methods for Imaging Metals in Biology: From Transition Metal Metabolism to Transition Metal Signaling.

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5.  Prolonged therapeutic hypothermia does not adversely impact neuroplasticity after global ischemia in rats.

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7.  Mapping the dynamics of cortical neuroplasticity of skilled motor learning using micro X-ray fluorescence and histofluorescence imaging of zinc in the rat.

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8.  A multimodal imaging workflow to visualize metal mixtures in the human placenta and explore colocalization with biological response markers.

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10.  FTIR imaging of brain tissue reveals crystalline creatine deposits are an ex vivo marker of localized ischemia during murine cerebral malaria: general implications for disease neurochemistry.

Authors:  Mark J Hackett; Joonsup Lee; Fatima El-Assaad; James A McQuillan; Elizabeth A Carter; Georges E Grau; Nicholas H Hunt; Peter A Lay
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