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Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron

PURPOSE: To perform magnetic resonance microscopy (MRM) on human cortex and a cortical lesion as well as the adjacent normal appearing white matter. To shed light on the origins of MRI contrast by comparison with histochemical and immunostaining. METHODS: 3D MRM at a nominal isotropic resolution of...

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Autores principales: Nair, Govind, Dodd, Stephen, Ha, Seung-Kwon, Koretsky, Alan P, Reich, Daniel S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7811778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32828923
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117285
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author Nair, Govind
Dodd, Stephen
Ha, Seung-Kwon
Koretsky, Alan P
Reich, Daniel S
author_facet Nair, Govind
Dodd, Stephen
Ha, Seung-Kwon
Koretsky, Alan P
Reich, Daniel S
author_sort Nair, Govind
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To perform magnetic resonance microscopy (MRM) on human cortex and a cortical lesion as well as the adjacent normal appearing white matter. To shed light on the origins of MRI contrast by comparison with histochemical and immunostaining. METHODS: 3D MRM at a nominal isotropic resolution of 15 and 18 μm was performed on 2 blocks of tissue from the brain of a 77-year-old man who had MS for 47 years. One block contained normal appearing cortical gray matter (CN block) and adjacent normal appearing white matter (NAWM), and the other also included a cortical lesion (CL block). Postmortem ex-vivo MRI was performed at 11.7T using a custom solenoid coil and T(2)*-weighted 3D GRE sequence. Histochemical and immunostaining were done after paraffin embedding for iron, myelin, oligodendrocytes, neurons, blood vessels, macrophages and microglia, and astrocytes. RESULTS: MRM could identify individual iron-laden oligodendrocytes with high sensitivity (70% decrease in signal compared to surrounding) in CN and CL blocks, as well as some iron-laden activated macrophages and microglia. Iron-deficient oligodendrocytes seemed to cause relative increase in MRI signal within the cortical lesion. High concentration of myelin in the white matter was primarily responsible for its hypointense appearance relative to the cortex, however, signal variations within NAWM could be attributed to changes in density of iron-laden oligodendrocytes. CONCLUSION: Changes in iron accumulation within cells gave rise to imaging contrast seen between cortical lesions and normal cortex, as well as the patchy signal in NAWM. Densely packed myelin and collagen deposition also contributed to MRM signal changes. Even though we studied only one block each from normal appearing and cortical lesions, such studies can help better understand the origins of histopathological and microstructural correlates of MRI signal changes in multiple sclerosis and contextualize the interpretation of lower-resolution in vivo MRI scans.
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spelling pubmed-78117782021-01-17 Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron Nair, Govind Dodd, Stephen Ha, Seung-Kwon Koretsky, Alan P Reich, Daniel S Neuroimage Article PURPOSE: To perform magnetic resonance microscopy (MRM) on human cortex and a cortical lesion as well as the adjacent normal appearing white matter. To shed light on the origins of MRI contrast by comparison with histochemical and immunostaining. METHODS: 3D MRM at a nominal isotropic resolution of 15 and 18 μm was performed on 2 blocks of tissue from the brain of a 77-year-old man who had MS for 47 years. One block contained normal appearing cortical gray matter (CN block) and adjacent normal appearing white matter (NAWM), and the other also included a cortical lesion (CL block). Postmortem ex-vivo MRI was performed at 11.7T using a custom solenoid coil and T(2)*-weighted 3D GRE sequence. Histochemical and immunostaining were done after paraffin embedding for iron, myelin, oligodendrocytes, neurons, blood vessels, macrophages and microglia, and astrocytes. RESULTS: MRM could identify individual iron-laden oligodendrocytes with high sensitivity (70% decrease in signal compared to surrounding) in CN and CL blocks, as well as some iron-laden activated macrophages and microglia. Iron-deficient oligodendrocytes seemed to cause relative increase in MRI signal within the cortical lesion. High concentration of myelin in the white matter was primarily responsible for its hypointense appearance relative to the cortex, however, signal variations within NAWM could be attributed to changes in density of iron-laden oligodendrocytes. CONCLUSION: Changes in iron accumulation within cells gave rise to imaging contrast seen between cortical lesions and normal cortex, as well as the patchy signal in NAWM. Densely packed myelin and collagen deposition also contributed to MRM signal changes. Even though we studied only one block each from normal appearing and cortical lesions, such studies can help better understand the origins of histopathological and microstructural correlates of MRI signal changes in multiple sclerosis and contextualize the interpretation of lower-resolution in vivo MRI scans. 2020-08-20 2020-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7811778/ /pubmed/32828923 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117285 Text en This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Article
Nair, Govind
Dodd, Stephen
Ha, Seung-Kwon
Koretsky, Alan P
Reich, Daniel S
Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title_full Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title_fullStr Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title_full_unstemmed Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title_short Ex vivo MR microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: Visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
title_sort ex vivo mr microscopy of a human brain with multiple sclerosis: visualizing individual cells in tissue using intrinsic iron
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7811778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32828923
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117285
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