National ALS Biorepository Samples Inventory
Biospecimen
- The National ALS Biorepository stores DNA, RNA, fibroblasts, PBMC’s, plasma, serum, whole blood, and red blood cells from premortem collections.
- All biospecimens are processed using standard procedures and made into standard sized aliquots (see table above) to avoid freeze/thaw cycles.
- Hair and nail clippings are stored at ambient temperature.
- Whole blood, serum, plasma, DNA, RNA, and urine are stored at -80◦.
- PBMCs are stored in an LN2 tank.
- There are biospecimen samples from 1,617 participants. These samples include
- 107 C9orf72 participants.
- 3 cases with mutations in SOD1.
Number of participants that donated Premortem Samples by Type*
| Sample Types (aliquot size) | Participants (N =1,617) | Aliquots (N =80,498) |
|---|---|---|
| DNA (2µg) | 1,466 | 25,751** |
| RNA (2µg) | 1,157 | 9,995 |
| Plasma (.5ml) | 1,346 | 9,141 |
| Serum (.5 ml) | 1,333 | 7,453 |
| Whole Blood – metals free (1.8 ml) | 1,316 | 3,306 |
| Red Blood Cells (1.0 ml) | 1,350 | 4,258 |
| Buffy Coat (1.0 ml) | 237 | 237 |
| PBMCs1 | 259 | 5,439 |
| Urine (1.8 ml) | 1,062 | 13,719** |
| Urine with preservative (4.5 ml) | 687 | 690 |
| Hair | 157 | 241 |
| Nails | 268 | 268 |
1 PBMCs – Peripheral blood mononuclear cells * Updated as of 9/30/23 **May include the stock aliquots
Postmortem
- The National ALS Biorepository collects bone, brain tissue, CSF, human primary cells, muscle, and spinal cord postmortem.
- Several hundred individual samples are frozen and fixed from each donation.
- All postmortem tissues are processed using standard procedures.
- Brain and spinal cord are stored frozen and fixed.
- Bone is stored fixed.
- Muscle is stored in paraffin blocks.
- CSF is stored frozen.
- Fibroblasts are stored in an LN2 tank.
- The 52 donations include:
- 6 C9orf72
- No cases with mutations in SOD1.
- There are 47 confirmed ALS cases.
- There are two not ALS and one inconclusive case.
- There is one case pending processing.
Number of participants that donated Postmortem Samples by Type*
| Sample Type | Participants (N =52) |
|---|---|
| Fixed brain regions | 52 |
| Fixed spinal cord regions | 51 |
| Fixed muscle | 50 |
| Frozen brain regions | 51 |
| Frozen spinal cord regions | 51 |
| Frozen CSF1 | 45 |
| Frozen muscle | 29 |
| Bone | 52 |
| Fibroblasts | 29 |
1CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid * Updated as of 9/30/23
Contact a member of the National ALS Biorepository Team at ALSBioresearch@mcking.com for more information.
Temple University ALS Postmortem Core
Funded by the National ALS Registry
- Includes frozen and fixed CNS tissues, liver, and several muscles from ALS/MND and non-neurologic control autopsies. A limited number of other tissues (sural/sciatic nerve, GI tract, skin, etc.) are also available.
- Standard Operating Procedures for tissue dissection, processing, QC analysis, clinical data elements, and neuropathological characterization are specifically optimized to meet the needs of ALS researchers.
- Our dissection method produces the maximum number of individual, optimally sized tissue samples from each ALS-relevant region, while preserving the architecture of the tissue.
- This minimizes subsequent freeze-thaw and labor that otherwise is necessary when re-dissecting frozen slabs or larger tissue regions, and produces several hundred specimens from each autopsy.
- 95 autopsies, including 19 familial ALS decedents
- 11 C9orf72 and 5 SOD1
- 10 with FTD+ALS
- Cases with mutations in SOD1, ALS4 (SETX), SBMA (AR), and others.
- 13 Control autopsies
Number of participants that donated Postmortem Samples by Type*
| Number of Autopsies with: | |
|---|---|
| Fixed brain regions | 89 |
| Fixed spinal cord regions | 85 |
| Fixed muscle | 64* |
| Frozen brain and brainstem regions | 86 |
| Frozen spinal cord regions | 84 |
| Frozen muscle | 56* |
*Multiple muscles are usually collected per autopsy, so the number of different individual muscles is considerably higher.
Contact the Core Director, Dr. Lyle Ostrow (Lyle.Ostrow@tuhs.temple.edu) or the Core Manager, Dr. Kathleen Wilsbach (Kathleen.Wilsbach@temple.edu) for more information.