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Published August 15, 1992 | Published
Journal Article Open

Magnetite biomineralization in the human brain

Abstract

Although the mineral magnetite (Fe_3O_4) is precipitated biochemically by bacteria, protists, and a variety of animals, it has not been documented previously in human tissue. Using an ultrasensitive superconducting magnetometer in a clean-lab environment, we have detected the presence of ferromagnetic material in a variety of tissues from the human brain. Magnetic particle extracts from solubilized brain tissues examined with high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, electron diffraction, and elemental analyses identify minerals in the magnetite-maghemite family, with many of the crystal morphologies and structures resembling strongly those precipitated by magnetotactic bacteria and fish. These magnetic and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy measurements imply the presence of a minimum of 5 million single-domain crystals per gram for most tissues in the brain and greater than 100 million crystals per gram for pia and dura. Magnetic property data indicate the crystals are in clumps of between 50 and 100 particles. Biogenic magnetite in the human brain may account for high-field saturation effects observed in the T1 and T2 values of magnetic resonance imaging and, perhaps, for a variety of biological effects of low-frequency magnetic fields.

Additional Information

© 1992 National Academy of Sciences. Communicated by Leon T. Silver, May 7, 1992. We thank Dr. Carol Miller of the University of Southern California Medical School for providing access to brain materials, Drs. Juan Diaz-Ricci, Derek H. Fender, and Leon T. Silver for helpful support and discussions, and Dr. C. C. Patterson for ultrapure water. Dr. Brent Fultz and Ms. Carol Garland of the Caltech Materials Research Center provided essential help with the high-voltage electron microscopy. Drs. K. M. Towe and R. B. Frankel provided critical and useful reviews of the manuscript. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM-41635, and the Caltech Materials Research Facility is supported by National Science Foundation Grant DMR-8811795. This is contribution 5068 from the Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences of the California Institute of Technology.

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August 22, 2023
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