Effects of Alzheimer’s disease and formalin fixation on the different mineralised-iron forms in the human brain

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

Louise van der Weerd (Leiden University Medical Center)

A.J.E. Lefering (TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy, TU Delft - Old - Interfaculty Reactor Institute)

Andrew Webb (Leiden University Medical Center)

Ramon Egli (Central Institute for Meteorology and Geo-dynamics (ZAMG), Vienna)

Lucia Bossoni (Leiden University Medical Center)

Research Group
RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy
Copyright
© 2020 Louise van der Weerd, A.J.E. Lefering, A. Webb, Ramon Egli, Lucia Bossoni
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73324-5
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 Louise van der Weerd, A.J.E. Lefering, A. Webb, Ramon Egli, Lucia Bossoni
Research Group
RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy
Issue number
1
Volume number
10
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Abstract

Iron accumulation in the brain is a phenomenon common to many neurodegenerative diseases, perhaps most notably Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We present here magnetic analyses of post-mortem brain tissue of patients who had severe Alzheimer’s disease, and compare the results with those from healthy controls. Isothermal remanent magnetization experiments were performed to assess the extent to which different magnetic carriers are affected by AD pathology and formalin fixation. While Alzheimer’s brain material did not show higher levels of magnetite/maghemite nanoparticles than corresponding controls, the ferrihydrite mineral, known to be found within the core of ferritin proteins and hemosiderin aggregates, almost doubled in concentration in patients with Alzheimer’s pathology, strengthening the conclusions of our previous studies. As part of this study, we also investigated the effects of sample preparation, by performing experiments on frozen tissue as well as tissue which had been fixed in formalin for a period of 5 months. Our results showed that the two different preparations did not critically affect the concentration of magnetic carriers in brain tissue, as observable by SQUID magnetometry.