Ex situ perfusion fixation for brain banking: a technical report.

TitleEx situ perfusion fixation for brain banking: a technical report.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsMcKenzie AT, Woodoff-Leith E, Dangoor D, Cervera A, Ressler HWalsh, Whitney K, Dams-O'Connor K, Wu Z, Hillman EMC, Seifert AC, Crary JF
JournalFree Neuropathol
Volume3
Date Published2022 Jan
ISSN2699-4445
Abstract

Perfusion fixation is a well-established technique in animal research to improve preservation quality in the study of many tissues, including the brain. There is a growing interest in using perfusion to fix postmortem human brain tissue to achieve the highest fidelity preservation for downstream high-resolution morphomolecular brain mapping studies. Numerous practical barriers arise when applying perfusion fixation in brain banking settings, including the large mass of the organ, degradation of vascular integrity and patency prior to the start of the procedure, and differing investigator goals sometimes necessitating part of the brain to be frozen. As a result, there is a critical need to establish a perfusion fixation procedure in brain banking that is flexible and scalable. This technical report describes our approach to developing an ex situ perfusion fixation protocol. We discuss the challenges encountered and lessons learned while implementing this procedure. Routine morphological staining and RNA in situ hybridization data show that the perfused brains have well-preserved tissue cytoarchitecture and intact biomolecular signal. However, it remains uncertain whether this procedure leads to improved histology quality compared to immersion fixation. Additionally, ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data suggest that the perfusion fixation protocol may introduce imaging artifacts in the form of air bubbles in the vasculature. We conclude with further research directions to investigate the use of perfusion fixation as a rigorous and reproducible alternative to immersion fixation for the preparation of postmortem human brains.

DOI10.17879/freeneuropathology-2022-4368
Alternate JournalFree Neuropathol
PubMed ID37284166
PubMed Central IDPMC10209847
Grant ListRF1 MH128969 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States