| Literature DB >> 32123392 |
Jianglai Wu1,2,3, Yajie Liang3, Shuo Chen1, Ching-Lung Hsu3, Mariya Chavarha4, Stephen W Evans4, Dongqing Shi4, Michael Z Lin4, Kevin K Tsia5, Na Ji6,7,8,9,10.
Abstract
Understanding information processing in the brain requires monitoring neuronal activity at high spatiotemporal resolution. Using an ultrafast two-photon fluorescence microscope empowered by all-optical laser scanning, we imaged neuronal activity in vivo at up to 3,000 frames per second and submicrometer spatial resolution. This imaging method enabled monitoring of both supra- and subthreshold electrical activity down to 345 μm below the brain surface in head-fixed awake mice.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32123392 PMCID: PMC7199528 DOI: 10.1038/s41592-020-0762-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Methods ISSN: 1548-7091 Impact factor: 47.990
Figure 1:Principles and resolution of a 2PFM with a FACED module.
(a) Schematic of FACED 2PFM. A 1-MHz collimated femtosecond laser was focused into a nearly parallel mirror pair with a converging angle Δθ by a cylindrical lens. After multiple reflections, the misalignment angle α caused the beamlets to retroreflect (e.g., the yellow ray). N = Δθ/α beamlets at different incidence angles (e.g., yellow versus gray rays) emerged with distinct propagation directions and temporal delays. Equivalently, the sequence of beamlets at the output of the FACED module can be treated as light emanating from an array of virtual sources. These beamlets were then coupled into a 2PFM and formed (b) an array of spatially separated and temporally delayed foci at the focal plane of a microscope objective. (c) The focal spot sizes along the X/FACED, Y, and Z axes, measured from 200-nm-diameter fluorescent beads. Error bars show s.d. from 10 beads; dashed lines indicate the expected axial and lateral resolutions at 1.05 NA.
Figure 2:1 kHz imaging of supra- and sub-threshold voltage responses with genetically encoded voltage sensor ASAP3 in V1 of awake mice.
(a,b) Representative images of neurons in V1 (a) sparsely or (b) densely labeled with soma-targeted ASAP3-Kv. (c) Spontaneous voltage traces (SNR, ΔF/√F) from neurons 1 and 2 in (a) and (b), respectively; Green ticks: spikes. (d) Neurons at different depths of a cortical column and their spontaneous voltage traces. (e) Average of 101 spikes from neuron 2 (orange trace) in (d); (f) Rise time, fall time, and ΔF/F of spikes (box-and-whisker plots, n = 45 cells from 3 mice). (g) 1kHz imaging over a 50 × 250 μm2 field of view with four neurons exhibiting distinct spontaneous activity patterns. 7 experiments were repeated independently with similar results. (h) Voltage traces from a V1 neurons showing orientation selectivity, with more sub- and supra-threshold activity for preferred orientations (black traces) than for non-preferred orientations (gray traces). (i) Raster plot of spikes for all trials (10 trials for each of 8 grating stimuli) and (j) polar plot showing the orientation tuning of mean subthreshold ΔF/F response (red) and spiking rate (black) of the neuron in (h). Representative results from 8 neurons. (k) Two neurons at 345 μm depth and (l) their subthreshold ΔF/F (upper traces, average of 52 trials) and spiking (lower histograms, 50-ms bins) responses relative to the onset of grating stimuli (red dashed line). Representative results from 20 neurons. (m) Histogram of the time to reach peak subthreshold voltage responses post stimulus onset from 20 cells in 3 mice. (n) Spiking response relative to stimulus onset. From top to bottom: raster plot, histogram (50-ms bins), and averaged firing rate (50-ms sliding rectangular windows) of 2747 detected spikes from 617 trials of 20 neurons in 3 mice. Shaded areas: s.d.; Scale bars: (a,b) 50 μm; (d,g) 10 μm; (h, k) 20 μm.