Section on Neuropathology, Clinical Brain Disorders Branch, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Biol Psychiatry. 2011 Jan 15;69(2):104-12. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2010.05.025. Epub 2010 Jul 31.
Postmortem human brain tissue is critical for advancing neurobiological studies of psychiatric illness, particularly for identifying brain-specific transcripts and isoforms. State-of-the-art methods and recommendations for maintaining psychiatric brain banks are discussed in three disparate collections, the National Institute of Mental Health Brain Tissue Collection, the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center, and the Mount Sinai School of Medicine Alzheimer's Disease and Schizophrenia Brain Bank. While the National Institute of Mental Health Brain Tissue Collection obtains donations from medical examiners and focuses on clinical diagnosis, toxicology, and building life span control cohorts, the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center is designed as a repository to collect large-volume, high-quality brain tissue from community-based donors across a nationwide network, placing emphasis on the accessibility of tissue and related data to research groups worldwide. The Mount Sinai School of Medicine Alzheimer's Disease and Schizophrenia Brain Bank has shown that prospective recruitment is a successful approach to tissue donation, placing particular emphasis on clinical diagnosis through antemortem contact with donors, as well as stereological tissue sampling methods for neuroanatomical studies and frozen tissue sampling approaches that enable multiple assessments (e.g., RNA, DNA, protein, enzyme activity, binding) of the same tissue block. Promising scientific approaches for elucidating the molecular and cellular pathways in brain that may contribute to schizophrenia are briefly discussed. Despite different perspectives from three established brain collections, there is consensus that varied networking strategies, rigorous tissue and clinical characterization, sample and data accessibility, and overall adaptability are integral to the success of psychiatric brain banking.
死后人类脑组织对于推进精神疾病的神经生物学研究至关重要,特别是对于鉴定大脑特异性转录本和同工型。国家心理健康研究所脑组织采集、哈佛脑组织资源中心和西奈山医学院阿尔茨海默病和精神分裂症脑组织库这三个不同的机构讨论了维护精神疾病脑组织库的最新方法和建议。国家心理健康研究所脑组织采集从法医处获得捐赠,并侧重于临床诊断、毒理学和建立寿命控制队列,而哈佛脑组织资源中心则旨在作为一个存储库,从全国范围内的社区捐赠者那里收集大容量、高质量的脑组织,强调组织和相关数据对全球研究小组的可及性。西奈山医学院阿尔茨海默病和精神分裂症脑组织库表明,前瞻性招募是组织捐赠的成功方法,特别强调通过与捐赠者生前接触进行临床诊断,以及用于神经解剖学研究的立体组织采样方法和可实现对同一组织块进行多次评估(例如 RNA、DNA、蛋白质、酶活性、结合)的冷冻组织采样方法。简要讨论了阐明可能导致精神分裂症的大脑中分子和细胞途径的有前途的科学方法。尽管这三个成熟的脑组织库有不同的观点,但它们一致认为,不同的网络策略、严格的组织和临床特征描述、样本和数据可及性以及整体适应性是精神疾病脑组织库成功的关键。