Post-mortem brain analyses of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: Extending lifetime cognitive and brain phenotyping to the level of the synapse: Data set from publication Henstridge et al 2015 Acta Neuropath Comms

Dataset

Abstract

Synaptic integrity is a strong indicator of cognitive health in the human brain; however, until recently, it was prohibitively difficult to perform detailed analyses of synaptic and axonal structure in human tissue sections. We have adapted a novel method of tissue preparation at autopsy to allow the study of human synapses from the LBC1936 cohort in unprecedented morphological and molecular detail, using the high-resolution imaging techniques of array tomography and electron microscopy. This allows us to analyze the brain at sub-micron resolution to assess density, protein composition and health of synapses. Here we present data from the first donated LBC1936 brain and compare our findings to Alzheimer’s diseased tissue to highlight the differences between healthy and pathological brain ageing. Our data indicates that compared to an Alzheimer’s disease patient, the cognitively normal LBC1936 participant had a remarkable degree of preservation of synaptic structures. However, morphological and molecular markers of degeneration in areas of the brain associated with cognition (prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, and superior temporal gyrus) were observed. Our novel post-mortem protocol facilitates high- resolution neuropathological analysis of the well-characterized LBC1936 cohort, extending phenotyping beyond cognition and in vivo imaging to now include neuropathological changes, at the level of single synapses.

Data Citation

Christopher M. Henstridge; Rosemary J. Jackson; JeeSoo M. Kim; Abigail G. Herrmann; Ann K. Wright; Sarah Harris; Mark E. Bastin; John M. Starr; Joanna Wardlaw; Thomas H. Gillingwater; Colin Smith; Chris-Anne McKenzie; Simon R. Cox; Ian J. Deary; Tara L. Spires-Jones. (2016). Post-mortem brain analyses of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: Extending lifetime cognitive and brain phenotyping to the level of the synapse: Data set from publication Henstridge et al 2015 Acta Neuropath Comms, 1936-2015 [dataset]. University of Edinburgh. School of Biomedical Sciences. http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/ds/1414.
Date made available1 Jun 2016
PublisherEdinburgh DataShare
Geographical coverageLothian

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