| Literature DB >> 34075229 |
Joao Couto1,2, Simon Musall3,4, Xiaonan R Sun1,5, Anup Khanal1,2, Steven Gluf1, Shreya Saxena6,7,8,9,10, Ian Kinsella7,8,9, Taiga Abe6,8,9, John P Cunningham6,7,8,9, Liam Paninski6,7,8,9, Anne K Churchland11,12.
Abstract
Measurements of neuronal activity across brain areas are important for understanding the neural correlates of cognitive and motor processes such as attention, decision-making and action selection. However, techniques that allow cellular resolution measurements are expensive and require a high degree of technical expertise, which limits their broad use. Wide-field imaging of genetically encoded indicators is a high-throughput, cost-effective and flexible approach to measure activity of specific cell populations with high temporal resolution and a cortex-wide field of view. Here we outline our protocol for assembling a wide-field macroscope setup, performing surgery to prepare the intact skull and imaging neural activity chronically in behaving, transgenic mice. Further, we highlight a processing pipeline that leverages novel, cloud-based methods to analyze large-scale imaging datasets. The protocol targets laboratories that are seeking to build macroscopes, optimize surgical procedures for long-term chronic imaging and/or analyze cortex-wide neuronal recordings. The entire protocol, including steps for assembly and calibration of the macroscope, surgical preparation, imaging and data analysis, requires a total of 8 h. It is designed to be accessible to laboratories with limited expertise in imaging methods or interest in high-throughput imaging during behavior.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34075229 PMCID: PMC8788140 DOI: 10.1038/s41596-021-00527-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Protoc ISSN: 1750-2799 Impact factor: 17.021