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Studying synapses in human brain with array tomography and electron microscopy.

Authors :
Kay KR
Smith C
Wright AK
Serrano-Pozo A
Pooler AM
Koffie R
Bastin ME
Bak TH
Abrahams S
Kopeikina KJ
McGuone D
Frosch MP
Gillingwater TH
Hyman BT
Spires-Jones TL
Source :
Nature protocols [Nat Protoc] 2013; Vol. 8 (7), pp. 1366-80. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Jun 20.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Postmortem studies of synapses in human brain are problematic because of the axial resolution limit of light microscopy and the difficulty in preserving and analyzing ultrastructure with electron microscopy (EM). Array tomography (AT) overcomes these problems by embedding autopsy tissue in resin and cutting ribbons of ultrathin serial sections. Ribbons are imaged with immunofluorescence, allowing high-throughput imaging of tens of thousands of synapses to assess synapse density and protein composition. The protocol takes ~3 d per case, excluding image analysis, which is done at the end of the study. Parallel processing for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) using a protocol modified to preserve the structure in human samples allows complementary ultrastructural studies. Incorporation of AT and TEM into brain banking is a potent way of phenotyping synapses in well-characterized clinical cohorts in order to develop clinicopathological correlations at the synapse level. This will be important for research in neurodegenerative disease, developmental disease and psychiatric illness.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1750-2799
Volume :
8
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature protocols
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23787894
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nprot.2013.078