School of Earth Sciences - Research Publications

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    Visualising mouse neuroanatomy and function by metal distribution using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry imaging (vol 6, pg 5383, 2015)
    Paul, B ; Hare, DJ ; Bishop, DP ; Paton, C ; Van, TN ; Cole, N ; Niedwiecki, MM ; Andreozzi, E ; Vais, A ; Billings, JL ; Bray, L ; Bush, AI ; McColl, G ; Roberts, BR ; Adlard, PA ; Finkelstein, DI ; Hellstrom, J ; Hergt, JM ; Woodhead, JD ; Doble, PA (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2016)
    [This corrects the article DOI: 10.1039/C5SC02231B.].
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    Imaging Metals in Brain Tissue by Laser Ablation - Inductively Coupled Plasma - Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS)
    Hare, DJ ; Kysenius, K ; Paul, B ; Knauer, B ; Hutchinson, RW ; O'Connor, C ; Fryer, F ; Hennessey, TP ; Bush, AI ; Crouch, PJ ; Doble, PA (JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2017-01-01)
    Metals are found ubiquitously throughout an organism, with their biological role dictated by both their chemical reactivity and abundance within a specific anatomical region. Within the brain, metals have a highly compartmentalized distribution, depending on the primary function they play within the central nervous system. Imaging the spatial distribution of metals has provided unique insight into the biochemical architecture of the brain, allowing direct correlation between neuroanatomical regions and their known function with regard to metal-dependent processes. In addition, several age-related neurological disorders feature disrupted metal homeostasis, which is often confined to small regions of the brain that are otherwise difficult to analyze. Here, we describe a comprehensive method for quantitatively imaging metals in the mouse brain, using laser ablation - inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) and specially designed image processing software. Focusing on iron, copper and zinc, which are three of the most abundant and disease-relevant metals within the brain, we describe the essential steps in sample preparation, analysis, quantitative measurements and image processing to produce maps of metal distribution within the low micrometer resolution range. This technique, applicable to any cut tissue section, is capable of demonstrating the highly variable distribution of metals within an organ or system, and can be used to identify changes in metal homeostasis and absolute levels within fine anatomical structures.
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    Whole-brain metallomic analysis of the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus)
    Knauer, B ; Majka, P ; Watkins, KJ ; Taylor, AWR ; Malamanova, D ; Paul, B ; Yu, H-H ; Bush, AI ; Hare, DJ ; Reser, DH (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2017-04-01)
    Despite the importance of transition metals for normal brain function, relatively little is known about the distribution of these elemental species across the different tissue compartments of the primate brain. In this study, we employed laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry on PFA-fixed brain sections obtained from two adult common marmosets. Concurrent cytoarchitectonic, myeloarchitectonic, and chemoarchitectonic measurements allowed for identification of the major neocortical, archaecortical, and subcortical divisions of the brain, and precise localisation of iron, manganese, and zinc concentrations within each division. Major findings across tissue compartments included: (1) differentiation of white matter tracts from grey matter based on manganese and zinc distribution; (2) high iron concentrations in the basal ganglia, cortex, and substantia nigra; (3) co-localization of high concentrations of iron and manganese in the primary sensory areas of the cerebral cortex; and (4) high manganese in the hippocampus. The marmoset has become a model species of choice for connectomic, aging, and transgenic studies in primates, and the application of metallomics to these disciplines has the potential to yield high translational and basic science value.
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    Visualising mouse neuroanatomy and function by metal distribution using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry imaging (vol 6, pg 5383, 2015)
    Paul, B ; Hare, DJ ; Bishop, DP ; Paton, C ; Van, TN ; Cole, N ; Niedzwiecki, MM ; Andreozzi, E ; Vais, A ; Billings, JL ; Bray, L ; Bush, AI ; McColl, G ; Roberts, BR ; Adlard, PA ; Finkelstein, DI ; Hellstrom, J ; Hergt, JM ; Woodhead, JD ; Doble, PA (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2015)
    [This corrects the article DOI: 10.1039/C5SC02231B.].
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    Visualising mouse neuroanatomy and function by metal distribution using laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry imaging
    Paul, B ; Hare, DJ ; Bishop, DP ; Paton, C ; Van, TN ; Cole, N ; Niedwiecki, MM ; Andreozzi, E ; Vais, A ; Billings, JL ; Bray, L ; Bush, AI ; McColl, G ; Roberts, BR ; Adlard, PA ; Finkelstein, DI ; Hellstrom, J ; Hergt, JM ; Woodhead, JD ; Doble, PA (ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY, 2015)
    Metals have a number of important roles within the brain. We used laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) to map the three-dimensional concentrations and distributions of transition metals, in particular iron (Fe), copper (Cu) and zinc (Zn) within the murine brain. LA-ICP-MS is one of the leading analytical tools for measuring metals in tissue samples. Here, we present a complete data reduction protocol for measuring metals in biological samples, including the application of a pyramidal voxel registration technique to reproducibly align tissue sections. We used gold (Au) nanoparticle and ytterbium (Yb)-tagged tyrosine hydroxylase antibodies to assess the co-localisation of Fe and dopamine throughout the entire mouse brain. We also examined the natural clustering of metal concentrations within the murine brain to elucidate areas of similar composition. This clustering technique uses a mathematical approach to identify multiple 'elemental clusters', avoiding user bias and showing that metal composition follows a hierarchical organisation of neuroanatomical structures. This work provides new insight into the distinct compartmentalisation of metals in the brain, and presents new avenues of exploration with regard to region-specific, metal-associated neurodegeneration observed in several chronic neurodegenerative diseases.