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2 October 2007

European scientists have developed a new technique to detect attogram
quantities of iron in living cells. - providing further evidence of the role
the metal plays in Parkinson's disease.
Iron is thought to form bulky chelate complexes with the neurotransmitter
dopamine in diseased cells, preventing it from being stored or transported
properly. But to date this has only been confirmed in the test tube because
conventional imaging techniques are not powerful enough to pick up the tiny
traces of iron.
Now, a team led Richard Ortega at the University of Bordeaux, France, has
used powerful X-ray radiation from a synchrotron to track iron in cells
cultured from rats.
By using a highly focused beam of X-rays with a wavelength of 88nm, the team
excited the iron in the cell and recorded the radiation released by the
metal -detecting amounts as small as one attogram (10-18g). They then mapped
dopamine in the same cell using ultraviolet fluorescence spectroscopy and
superimposed the images from the two techniques.
When they compared the images they got from normal cells and cells treated
to mimic the onset of Parkinson's disease, they found iron accumulating
inside the dopamine storing vesicles of the cell.

Ortega's team detects Parkinson's culprit using new X-ray technique


© Richard Ortega

The new X-ray setup opens up many possibilities for similar research, Ortega
told Chemistry World. 'This research is in an early stage [but] the work
provides a new way of thinking about treatment of Parkinson's disease.'
Olivier Hignette of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), who
helped develop the equipment used in the research, said stronger more
energetic X-rays could allow many more metals in cells to be probed.
'We are not yet at the limit of this technology,' he said. 'Upon improvement
of the apparatus, 40 or even 30nm radiation with similar photon fluxes may
be achieved.'
Commenting on the work, David Dexter of Imperial College London, who works
on the role of iron in neurodegenerative diseases, said, 'This does
strengthen the idea of the contribution of iron to neurodegenerative
diseases. It certainly adds a new dimension to the whole problem.'
Jonathan Edwards

R Ortega et al, PLoS ONE, 2007, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0000925

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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