| Literature DB >> 27226303 |
Marco Palombo1, Clémence Ligneul2, Chloé Najac2, Juliette Le Douce2, Julien Flament3, Carole Escartin2, Philippe Hantraye4, Emmanuel Brouillet2, Gilles Bonvento2, Julien Valette1.
Abstract
The brain is one of the most complex organs, and tools are lacking to assess its cellular morphology in vivo. Here we combine original diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy acquisition and novel modeling strategies to explore the possibility of quantifying brain cell morphology noninvasively. First, the diffusion of cell-specific metabolites is measured at ultra-long diffusion times in the rodent and primate brain in vivo to observe how cell long-range morphology constrains metabolite diffusion. Massive simulations of particles diffusing in synthetic cells parameterized by morphometric statistics are then iterated to fit experimental data. This method yields synthetic cells (tentatively neurons and astrocytes) that exhibit striking qualitative and quantitative similarities with histology (e.g., using Sholl analysis). With our approach, we measure major interspecies difference regarding astrocytes, whereas dendritic organization appears better conserved throughout species. This work suggests that the time dependence of metabolite diffusion coefficient allows distinguishing and quantitatively characterizing brain cell morphologies noninvasively.Entities:
Keywords: cell morphology; diffusion-weighted NMR spectroscopy; metabolites; noninvasive histology; numerical simulations
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27226303 PMCID: PMC4914152 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1504327113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205