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1.
J Synchrotron Radiat ; 31(Pt 4): 851-866, 2024 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38771775

RESUMO

Despite the increased brilliance of the new generation synchrotron sources, there is still a challenge with high-resolution scanning of very thick and absorbing samples, such as a whole mouse brain stained with heavy elements, and, extending further, brains of primates. Samples are typically cut into smaller parts, to ensure a sufficient X-ray transmission, and scanned separately. Compared with the standard tomography setup where the sample would be cut into many pillars, the laminographic geometry operates with slab-shaped sections significantly reducing the number of sample parts to be prepared, the cutting damage and data stitching problems. In this work, a laminography pipeline for imaging large samples (>1 cm) at micrometre resolution is presented. The implementation includes a low-cost instrument setup installed at the 2-BM micro-CT beamline of the Advanced Photon Source. Additionally, sample mounting, scanning techniques, data stitching procedures, a fast reconstruction algorithm with low computational complexity, and accelerated reconstruction on multi-GPU systems for processing large-scale datasets are presented. The applicability of the whole laminography pipeline was demonstrated by imaging four sequential slabs throughout an entire mouse brain sample stained with osmium, in total generating approximately 12 TB of raw data for reconstruction.

2.
Neuroimage ; 244: 118576, 2021 12 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34520833

RESUMO

Diffusion MRI tractography is the only noninvasive method to measure the structural connectome in humans. However, recent validation studies have revealed limitations of modern tractography approaches, which lead to significant mistracking caused in part by local uncertainties in fiber orientations that accumulate to produce larger errors for longer streamlines. Characterizing the role of this length bias in tractography is complicated by the true underlying contribution of spatial embedding to brain topology. In this work, we compare graphs constructed with ex vivo tractography data in mice and neural tracer data from the Allen Mouse Brain Connectivity Atlas to random geometric surrogate graphs which preserve the low-order distance effects from each modality in order to quantify the role of geometry in various network properties. We find that geometry plays a substantially larger role in determining the topology of graphs produced by tractography than graphs produced by tracers. Tractography underestimates weights at long distances compared to neural tracers, which leads tractography to place network hubs close to the geometric center of the brain, as do corresponding tractography-derived random geometric surrogates, while tracer graphs place hubs further into peripheral areas of the cortex. We also explore the role of spatial embedding in modular structure, network efficiency and other topological measures in both modalities. Throughout, we compare the use of two different tractography streamline node assignment strategies and find that the overall differences between tractography approaches are small relative to the differences between tractography- and tracer-derived graphs. These analyses help quantify geometric biases inherent to tractography and promote the use of geometric benchmarking in future tractography validation efforts.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Imagem de Tensor de Difusão/métodos , Animais , Córtex Cerebral/diagnóstico por imagem , Conectoma , Camundongos
3.
Magn Reson Med ; 85(2): 667-677, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32783262

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Dysmyelinating diseases are characterized by abnormal myelin formation and function. Such microstructural abnormalities in myelin have been demonstrated to produce measurable effects on the MR signal. This work examines these effects on measurements of voxel-wise, high-resolution water spectra acquired using a 3D echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) pulse sequence from both postmortem fixed control mouse brains and a dysmyelination mouse brain model. METHODS: Perfusion fixed, resected control (n = 5) and shiverer (n = 4) mouse brains were imaged using 3D-EPSI with 100 µm isotropic resolution. The free induction decay (FID) was sampled every 2.74 ms over 192 echoes, for a total sampling duration of 526.08 ms. Voxel-wise FIDs were Fourier transformed to produce water spectra with 1.9 Hz resolution. Spectral asymmetry was computed and compared between the two tissue types. RESULTS: The water resonance is more asymmetrically broadened in the white matter of control mouse brain compared with dysmyelinated white matter. In control brain, this is modulated by and consistent with previously reported orientationally dependent effects of white matter relative to B0 . Similar sensitivity to orientation is observed in dysmyelinated white matter as well; however, the magnitude of the resonance asymmetry is much lower across all directions. CONCLUSION: Results demonstrate that components of the spectra are specifically differentially affected by myelin concentration. This suggests that water proton spectra may be sensitive to the presence of myelin, and as such, could serve as a MRI-based biomarker of dysmyelinating disease, free of mathematical models.


Assuntos
Bainha de Mielina , Substância Branca , Animais , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Imagem Ecoplanar , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Camundongos , Água , Substância Branca/diagnóstico por imagem
4.
Ecol Evol ; 14(4): e11137, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38571794

RESUMO

Comparative anatomy is an important tool for investigating evolutionary relationships among species, but the lack of scalable imaging tools and stains for rapidly mapping the microscale anatomies of related species poses a major impediment to using comparative anatomy approaches for identifying evolutionary adaptations. We describe a method using synchrotron source micro-x-ray computed tomography (syn-µXCT) combined with machine learning algorithms for high-throughput imaging of Lepidoptera (i.e., butterfly and moth) eyes. Our pipeline allows for imaging at rates of ~15 min/mm3 at 600 nm3 resolution. Image contrast is generated using standard electron microscopy labeling approaches (e.g., osmium tetroxide) that unbiasedly labels all cellular membranes in a species-independent manner thus removing any barrier to imaging any species of interest. To demonstrate the power of the method, we analyzed the 3D morphologies of butterfly crystalline cones, a part of the visual system associated with acuity and sensitivity and found significant variation within six butterfly individuals. Despite this variation, a classic measure of optimization, the ratio of interommatidial angle to resolving power of ommatidia, largely agrees with early work on eye geometry across species. We show that this method can successfully be used to determine compound eye organization and crystalline cone morphology. Our novel pipeline provides for fast, scalable visualization and analysis of eye anatomies that can be applied to any arthropod species, enabling new questions about evolutionary adaptations of compound eyes and beyond.

5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36824798

RESUMO

We report that the rate of synapse development in primary sensory cortices of mice and macaques is unrelated to lifespan, as was previously thought. We analyzed 28,084 synapses over multiple developmental time points in both species and find, instead, that net excitatory synapse development of mouse and macaque neurons primarily increased at similar rates in the first few postnatal months, and then decreased over a span of 1-1.5 years of age. The development of inhibitory synapses differed qualitatively across species. In macaques, net inhibitory synapses first increase and then decrease on excitatory soma at similar ages as excitatory synapses. In mice, however, such synapses are added throughout life. These findings contradict the long-held belief that the cycle of synapse formation and pruning occurs earlier in shorter-lived animals. Instead, our results suggest more nuanced rules, with the development of different types of synapses following different timing rules or different trajectories across species.

6.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 8018, 2023 Dec 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38049416

RESUMO

The neotenous, or delayed, development of primate neurons, particularly human ones, is thought to underlie primate-specific abilities like cognition. We tested whether synaptic development follows suit-would synapses, in absolute time, develop slower in longer-lived, highly cognitive species like non-human primates than in shorter-lived species with less human-like cognitive abilities, e.g., the mouse? Instead, we find that excitatory and inhibitory synapses in the male Mus musculus (mouse) and Rhesus macaque (primate) cortex form at similar rates, at similar times after birth. Primate excitatory and inhibitory synapses and mouse excitatory synapses also prune in such an isochronic fashion. Mouse inhibitory synapses are the lone exception, which are not pruned and instead continuously added throughout life. The monotony of synaptic development clocks across species with disparate lifespans, experiences, and cognitive abilities argues that such programs are likely orchestrated by genetic events rather than experience.


Assuntos
Neurônios , Sinapses , Camundongos , Animais , Masculino , Macaca mulatta , Sinapses/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Cognição
7.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Sep 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37771915

RESUMO

Detailing the physical basis of neural circuits with large-volume serial electron microscopy (EM), 'connectomics', has emerged as an invaluable tool in the neuroscience armamentarium. However, imaging synaptic resolution connectomes is currently limited to either transmission electron microscopy (TEM) or scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Here, we describe a third way, using photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) which illuminates ultra-thin brain slices collected on solid substrates with UV light and images the photoelectron emission pattern with a wide-field electron microscope. PEEM works with existing sample preparations for EM and routinely provides sufficient resolution and contrast to reveal myelinated axons, somata, dendrites, and sub-cellular organelles. Under optimized conditions, PEEM provides synaptic resolution; and simulation and experiments show that PEEM can be transformatively fast, at Gigahertz pixel rates. We conclude that PEEM imaging leverages attractive aspects of SEM and TEM, namely reliable sample collection on robust substrates combined with fast wide-field imaging, and could enable faster data acquisition for next-generation connectomics.

8.
Cell Rep Methods ; 2(6): 100225, 2022 06 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35784651

RESUMO

The ability to precisely control transgene expression is essential for basic research and clinical applications. Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are non-pathogenic and can be used to drive stable expression in virtually any tissue, cell type, or species, but their limited genomic payload results in a trade-off between the transgenes that can be incorporated and the complexity of the regulatory elements controlling their expression. Resolving these competing imperatives in complex experiments inevitably results in compromises. Here, we assemble an optimized viral toolkit (VTK) that addresses these limitations and allows for efficient combinatorial targeting of cell types. Moreover, their modular design explicitly enables further refinements. We achieve this in compact vectors by integrating structural improvements of AAV vectors with innovative molecular tools. We illustrate the potential of this approach through a systematic demonstration of their utility for targeting cell types and querying their biology using a wide array of genetically encoded tools.


Assuntos
Vetores Genéticos , Sistema Nervoso , Transdução Genética , Vetores Genéticos/genética , Transgenes/genética
9.
Cell Rep ; 36(11): 109709, 2021 09 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34525373

RESUMO

Detailing how primate and mouse neurons differ is critical for creating generalized models of how neurons process information. We reconstruct 15,748 synapses in adult Rhesus macaques and mice and ask how connectivity differs on identified cell types in layer 2/3 of primary visual cortex. Primate excitatory and inhibitory neurons receive 2-5 times fewer excitatory and inhibitory synapses than similar mouse neurons. Primate excitatory neurons have lower excitatory-to-inhibitory (E/I) ratios than mouse but similar E/I ratios in inhibitory neurons. In both species, properties of inhibitory axons such as synapse size and frequency are unchanged, and inhibitory innervation of excitatory neurons is local and specific. Using artificial recurrent neural networks (RNNs) optimized for different cognitive tasks, we find that penalizing networks for creating and maintaining synapses, as opposed to neuronal firing, reduces the number of connections per node as the number of nodes increases, similar to primate neurons compared with mice.


Assuntos
Neurônios/fisiologia , Córtex Visual Primário/fisiologia , Sinapses/fisiologia , Animais , Macaca mulatta/fisiologia , Masculino , Camundongos , Microscopia Eletrônica , Redes Neurais de Computação
10.
Elife ; 102021 12 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34965204

RESUMO

Dopaminergic (DA) neurons exert profound influences on behavior including addiction. However, how DA axons communicate with target neurons and how those communications change with drug exposure remains poorly understood. We leverage cell type-specific labeling with large volume serial electron microscopy to detail DA connections in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) of the mouse (Mus musculus) before and after exposure to cocaine. We find that individual DA axons contain different varicosity types based on their vesicle contents. Spatially ordering along individual axons further suggests that varicosity types are non-randomly organized. DA axon varicosities rarely make specific synapses (<2%, 6/410), but instead are more likely to form spinule-like structures (15%, 61/410) with neighboring neurons. Days after a brief exposure to cocaine, DA axons were extensively branched relative to controls, formed blind-ended 'bulbs' filled with mitochondria, and were surrounded by elaborated glia. Finally, mitochondrial lengths increased by ~2.2 times relative to control only in DA axons and NAc spiny dendrites after cocaine exposure. We conclude that DA axonal transmission is unlikely to be mediated via classical synapses in the NAc and that the major locus of anatomical plasticity of DA circuits after exposure to cocaine are large-scale axonal re-arrangements with correlated changes in mitochondria.


Assuntos
Axônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Cocaína/farmacologia , Conectoma , Neurônios Dopaminérgicos/efeitos dos fármacos , Animais , Axônios/ultraestrutura , Neurônios Dopaminérgicos/ultraestrutura , Camundongos , Camundongos Transgênicos , Microscopia Eletrônica , Mitocôndrias/ultraestrutura , Núcleo Accumbens/efeitos dos fármacos
12.
Elife ; 32014 Nov 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25383925

RESUMO

We asked how a new, complex trait evolves by selecting for diurnal oscillations in the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We expressed yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) from a yeast promoter and selected for a regular alternation between low and high fluorescence over a 24-hr period. This selection produced changes in cell adhesion rather than YFP expression: clonal populations oscillated between single cells and multicellular clumps. The oscillations are not a response to environmental cues and continue for at least three cycles in a constant environment. We identified eight putative causative mutations in one clone and recreated the evolved phenotype in the ancestral strain. The mutated genes lack obvious relationships to each other, but multiple lineages change from the haploid to the diploid pattern of gene expression. We show that a novel, complex phenotype can evolve by small sets of mutations in genes whose molecular functions appear to be unrelated to each other.

13.
14.
Exp Cell Res ; 312(17): 3336-48, 2006 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16935280

RESUMO

p120-catenin (p120) regulates cadherin turnover and is required for cadherin stability. Extensive and dynamic phosphorylation on tyrosine, serine and threonine residues in the N-terminal regulatory domain has been postulated to regulate p120 function, possibly through modulation of the efficiency of p120/cadherin interaction. Here we have utilized novel phospho-specific monoclonal antibodies to four major p120 serine and threonine phosphorylation sites to monitor individual phosphorylation events and their consequences. Surprisingly, membrane-localization and not cadherin interaction is the main determinant in p120 serine and threonine phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Furthermore, the phospho-status of these four residues had no obvious effect on p120's role in cadherin complex stabilization or cell-cell adhesion. Interestingly, dephosphorylation was dramatically induced by PKC activation, but PKC-independent pathways were also evident. The data suggest that p120 dephosphorylation at these sites is modulated by multiple cell surface receptors primarily through PKC-dependent pathways, but these changes do not seem to reduce p120/cadherin affinity.


Assuntos
Caderinas/metabolismo , Moléculas de Adesão Celular/metabolismo , Fosfoproteínas/metabolismo , Serina/metabolismo , Treonina/metabolismo , Substituição de Aminoácidos , Animais , Cateninas , Moléculas de Adesão Celular/análise , Moléculas de Adesão Celular/imunologia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Cães , Humanos , Ligantes , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Fosfoproteínas/análise , Fosfoproteínas/imunologia , Fosforilação , Ligação Proteica , Proteína Quinase C/metabolismo , RNA Interferente Pequeno , Receptores Acoplados a Proteínas G/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais , delta Catenina
15.
Cell ; 127(5): 1027-39, 2006 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17129786

RESUMO

Integration of receptor tyrosine kinase, integrin, and cadherin activities is crucial for normal cell growth, motility, and adhesion. Here, we describe roles for p120-catenin (p120) and p190RhoGAP that coordinate crosstalk between these systems and regulate cadherin function. Surprisingly, PDGFR-induced actin remodeling in NIH3T3 cells is blocked in the absence of p120, and the cells are partially transformed via constitutive activation of Rho. We have traced the mechanism to unexpected codependent roles for p120 and p190RhoGAP in regulating Rac-dependent antagonism of Rho. Receptor-induced Rac activity causes translocation of p190RhoGAP to adherens junctions (AJs), where it couples to the cadherin complex via interaction with p120. AJ formation is dependent on this p120-p190RhoGAP interaction and fails altogether if either of these proteins are compromised. We propose that Rac activation links diverse signaling systems to AJ assembly by controlling transient p190RhoGAP interactions with p120 and localized inhibition of Rho.


Assuntos
Moléculas de Adesão Celular/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Proteínas Ativadoras de GTPase/metabolismo , Fosfoproteínas/metabolismo , Proteínas Repressoras/metabolismo , Proteínas rac de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Proteínas rho de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Actinas/metabolismo , Junções Aderentes/metabolismo , Animais , Cateninas , Adesão Celular , Moléculas de Adesão Celular/deficiência , Linhagem Celular Transformada , Proliferação de Células , Extensões da Superfície Celular/metabolismo , Meios de Cultura Livres de Soro , Fibroblastos/citologia , Fibronectinas/metabolismo , Integrinas/metabolismo , Camundongos , Modelos Biológicos , Células NIH 3T3 , Fosfoproteínas/deficiência , Receptores do Fator de Crescimento Derivado de Plaquetas/metabolismo , Fibras de Estresse/metabolismo , Proteínas rac de Ligação ao GTP/antagonistas & inibidores , Proteínas rho de Ligação ao GTP/antagonistas & inibidores , delta Catenina
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