| Literature DB >> 24998224 |
Mikhail Kislin1, Ekaterina Mugantseva1, Dmitry Molotkov1, Natalia Kulesskaya1, Stanislav Khirug1, Ilya Kirilkin2, Evgeny Pryazhnikov3, Julia Kolikova2, Dmytro Toptunov2, Mikhail Yuryev1, Rashid Giniatullin4, Vootele Voikar5, Claudio Rivera1, Heikki Rauvala1, Leonard Khiroug6.
Abstract
It is widely acknowledged that the use of general anesthetics can undermine the relevance of electrophysiological or microscopical data obtained from a living animal's brain. Moreover, the lengthy recovery from anesthesia limits the frequency of repeated recording/imaging episodes in longitudinal studies. Hence, new methods that would allow stable recordings from non-anesthetized behaving mice are expected to advance the fields of cellular and cognitive neurosciences. Existing solutions range from mere physical restraint to more sophisticated approaches, such as linear and spherical treadmills used in combination with computer-generated virtual reality. Here, a novel method is described where a head-fixed mouse can move around an air-lifted mobile homecage and explore its environment under stress-free conditions. This method allows researchers to perform behavioral tests (e.g., learning, habituation or novel object recognition) simultaneously with two-photon microscopic imaging and/or patch-clamp recordings, all combined in a single experiment. This video-article describes the use of the awake animal head fixation device (mobile homecage), demonstrates the procedures of animal habituation, and exemplifies a number of possible applications of the method.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24998224 PMCID: PMC4209781 DOI: 10.3791/51869
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355