Cargando…

Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography

Biodiversity hotspots, which harbor more endemic species than elsewhere on Earth, are increasingly threatened. There is a need to accelerate collection efforts in these regions before threatened or endangered species become extinct. The diverse geographical, ecological, genetic, morphological, and b...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hughes, Daniel F., Walker, Ellen M., Gignac, Paul M., Martinez, Anais, Negishi, Kenichiro, Lieb, Carl S., Greenbaum, Eli, Khan, Arshad M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4873048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27196138
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155824
_version_ 1782432828602974208
author Hughes, Daniel F.
Walker, Ellen M.
Gignac, Paul M.
Martinez, Anais
Negishi, Kenichiro
Lieb, Carl S.
Greenbaum, Eli
Khan, Arshad M.
author_facet Hughes, Daniel F.
Walker, Ellen M.
Gignac, Paul M.
Martinez, Anais
Negishi, Kenichiro
Lieb, Carl S.
Greenbaum, Eli
Khan, Arshad M.
author_sort Hughes, Daniel F.
collection PubMed
description Biodiversity hotspots, which harbor more endemic species than elsewhere on Earth, are increasingly threatened. There is a need to accelerate collection efforts in these regions before threatened or endangered species become extinct. The diverse geographical, ecological, genetic, morphological, and behavioral data generated from the on-site collection of an individual specimen are useful for many scientific purposes. However, traditional methods for specimen preparation in the field do not permit researchers to retrieve neuroanatomical data, disregarding potentially useful data for increasing our understanding of brain diversity. These data have helped clarify brain evolution, deciphered relationships between structure and function, and revealed constraints and selective pressures that provide context about the evolution of complex behavior. Here, we report our field-testing of two commonly used laboratory-based techniques for brain preservation while on a collecting expedition in the Congo Basin and Albertine Rift, two poorly known regions associated with the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot. First, we found that transcardial perfusion fixation and long-term brain storage, conducted in remote field conditions with no access to cold storage laboratory equipment, had no observable impact on cytoarchitectural features of lizard brain tissue when compared to lizard brain tissue processed under laboratory conditions. Second, field-perfused brain tissue subjected to prolonged post-fixation remained readily compatible with subsequent immunohistochemical detection of neural antigens, with immunostaining that was comparable to that of laboratory-perfused brain tissue. Third, immersion-fixation of lizard brains, prepared under identical environmental conditions, was readily compatible with subsequent iodine-enhanced X-ray microcomputed tomography, which facilitated the non-destructive imaging of the intact brain within its skull. In summary, we have validated multiple approaches to preserving intact lizard brains in remote field conditions with limited access to supplies and a high degree of environmental exposure. This protocol should serve as a malleable framework for researchers attempting to rescue perishable and irreplaceable morphological and molecular data from regions of disappearing biodiversity. Our approach can be harnessed to extend the numbers of species being actively studied by the neuroscience community, by reducing some of the difficulty associated with acquiring brains of animal species that are not readily available in captivity.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4873048
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-48730482016-06-09 Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography Hughes, Daniel F. Walker, Ellen M. Gignac, Paul M. Martinez, Anais Negishi, Kenichiro Lieb, Carl S. Greenbaum, Eli Khan, Arshad M. PLoS One Research Article Biodiversity hotspots, which harbor more endemic species than elsewhere on Earth, are increasingly threatened. There is a need to accelerate collection efforts in these regions before threatened or endangered species become extinct. The diverse geographical, ecological, genetic, morphological, and behavioral data generated from the on-site collection of an individual specimen are useful for many scientific purposes. However, traditional methods for specimen preparation in the field do not permit researchers to retrieve neuroanatomical data, disregarding potentially useful data for increasing our understanding of brain diversity. These data have helped clarify brain evolution, deciphered relationships between structure and function, and revealed constraints and selective pressures that provide context about the evolution of complex behavior. Here, we report our field-testing of two commonly used laboratory-based techniques for brain preservation while on a collecting expedition in the Congo Basin and Albertine Rift, two poorly known regions associated with the Eastern Afromontane biodiversity hotspot. First, we found that transcardial perfusion fixation and long-term brain storage, conducted in remote field conditions with no access to cold storage laboratory equipment, had no observable impact on cytoarchitectural features of lizard brain tissue when compared to lizard brain tissue processed under laboratory conditions. Second, field-perfused brain tissue subjected to prolonged post-fixation remained readily compatible with subsequent immunohistochemical detection of neural antigens, with immunostaining that was comparable to that of laboratory-perfused brain tissue. Third, immersion-fixation of lizard brains, prepared under identical environmental conditions, was readily compatible with subsequent iodine-enhanced X-ray microcomputed tomography, which facilitated the non-destructive imaging of the intact brain within its skull. In summary, we have validated multiple approaches to preserving intact lizard brains in remote field conditions with limited access to supplies and a high degree of environmental exposure. This protocol should serve as a malleable framework for researchers attempting to rescue perishable and irreplaceable morphological and molecular data from regions of disappearing biodiversity. Our approach can be harnessed to extend the numbers of species being actively studied by the neuroscience community, by reducing some of the difficulty associated with acquiring brains of animal species that are not readily available in captivity. Public Library of Science 2016-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4873048/ /pubmed/27196138 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155824 Text en © 2016 Hughes et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hughes, Daniel F.
Walker, Ellen M.
Gignac, Paul M.
Martinez, Anais
Negishi, Kenichiro
Lieb, Carl S.
Greenbaum, Eli
Khan, Arshad M.
Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title_full Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title_fullStr Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title_full_unstemmed Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title_short Rescuing Perishable Neuroanatomical Information from a Threatened Biodiversity Hotspot: Remote Field Methods for Brain Tissue Preservation Validated by Cytoarchitectonic Analysis, Immunohistochemistry, and X-Ray Microcomputed Tomography
title_sort rescuing perishable neuroanatomical information from a threatened biodiversity hotspot: remote field methods for brain tissue preservation validated by cytoarchitectonic analysis, immunohistochemistry, and x-ray microcomputed tomography
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4873048/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27196138
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155824
work_keys_str_mv AT hughesdanielf rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT walkerellenm rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT gignacpaulm rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT martinezanais rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT negishikenichiro rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT liebcarls rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT greenbaumeli rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography
AT khanarshadm rescuingperishableneuroanatomicalinformationfromathreatenedbiodiversityhotspotremotefieldmethodsforbraintissuepreservationvalidatedbycytoarchitectonicanalysisimmunohistochemistryandxraymicrocomputedtomography