NeuroImage (Aug 2024)

A method to image brain tissue frozen at autopsy

  • Govind Nair,
  • Roy Sun,
  • Hellmut Merkle,
  • Qing Xu,
  • Kyra Hoskin,
  • Kendyl Bree,
  • Stephen Dodd,
  • Alan P. Koretsky

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 296
p. 120680

Abstract

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Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) can provide the location and signal characteristics of pathological regions within a postmortem tissue block, thereby improving the efficiency of histopathological studies. However, such postmortem-MRI guided histopathological studies have so far only been performed on fixed samples as imaging tissue frozen at the time of extraction, while preserving its integrity, is significantly more challenging. Here we describe the development of cold-postmortem-MRI, which can preserve tissue integrity and help target techniques such as transcriptomics. As a first step, RNA integrity number (RIN) was used to determine the rate of tissue biomolecular degradation in mouse brains placed at various temperatures between -20 °C and +20 °C for up to 24 h. Then, human tissue frozen at the time of autopsy was immersed in 2-methylbutane, sealed in a bio-safe tissue chamber, and cooled in the MRI using a recirculating chiller to determine MRI signal characteristics. The optimal imaging temperature, which did not show significant RIN deterioration for over 12 h, at the same time giving robust MRI signal and contrast between brain tissue types was deemed to be −7 °C. Finally, MRI was performed on human tissue blocks at this optimal imaging temperatures using a magnetization-prepared rapid gradient echo (MPRAGE, isotropic resolution between 0.3–0.4 mm) revealing good gray-white matter contrast and revealing subpial, subcortical, and deep white matter lesions. RINs measured before and after imaging revealed no significant changes (n = 3, p = 0.18, paired t-test). In addition to improving efficiency of downstream processes, imaging tissue at sub-zero temperatures may also improve our understanding of compartment specificity of MRI signal.

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