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Effects of aging and alcohol on the biochemical composition of histologically normal human brain
Authors:Richard C. Wiggins  Anne Gorman  Carolyn Rolsten  T. Samorajski  William E. Bailinger Jr.  Gerhard Freund
Affiliation:(1) Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Box 20708, 77025 Houston, Texas;(2) Department of Psychiatry and the Mental Sciences, Box 20708, 77025 Houston, Texas;(3) Department of Pathology, University of Florida College of Medicine, 32610 Gainesville, Florida;(4) Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, 32610 Gainesville, Florida
Abstract:Human brains were removed at autopsy and examined grossly and histologically for any abnormality or evidence of disease. Sixty-two brains appearing normal by these criteria were examined further. First, a detailed record of alcohol consumption was obtained. Second, frozen punches of gray and white matter were used to determine the compositional change associated with age and drinking patterns. Increased age was associated with an increase in the water content, particularly in the white matter, a decline in RNA content in gray matter, a decline in total protein in white matter, and a decline in both myelin and the myelin-like subfraction. The loss of myelin membrane in white matter corresponded to a similar increase in water content, although there was an additional loss of some nonmyelin protein. There was no significant shift in the density between the myelin and the myelin-like membranes, and the protein composition of myelin was not significantly altered by age. A history of heavy alcohol consumption was associated with a relative increase in total protein in white matter even though heavy drinking accelerated the age-related loss of myelin. Presumably, alcohol produced a lag in the rate at which nonmyelin proteins are lost or accelerated the accumulation of abnormal protein. Alcohol consumption did not influence the myelin composition or the ratio of myelin and myelin-like membranes. The interval between patient death and autopsy was shown to have little or no effect on the samples used in this study. These data show that normal aging, uncomplicated by other disease processes, can have a significant effect on the composition of brain tissue, particularly the white matter, and that heavy alcohol consumption accelerates degenerative change, even in tissue appearing normal by histology.
Keywords:aging  alcohol  DNA  myelin  myelin-like  protein  RNA  water
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