Awake Mouse Imaging: From Two-Photon Microscopy to Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

清醒小鼠成像:从双光子显微镜到血氧水平依赖性功能性磁共振成像

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作者:Michèle Desjardins, Kıvılcım Kılıç, Martin Thunemann, Celine Mateo, Dominic Holland, Christopher G L Ferri, Jonathan A Cremonesi, Baoqiang Li, Qun Cheng, Kimberly L Weldy, Payam A Saisan, David Kleinfeld, Takaki Komiyama, Thomas T Liu, Robert Bussell, Eric C Wong, Miriam Scadeng, Andrew K Dunn, Davi

Background

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in awake behaving mice is well positioned to bridge the detailed cellular-level view of brain activity, which has become available owing to recent advances in microscopic optical imaging and genetics, to the macroscopic scale of human noninvasive observables. However, though microscopic (e.g., two-photon imaging) studies in behaving mice have become a reality in many laboratories, awake mouse fMRI remains a challenge. Owing to variability in behavior among animals, performing all types of measurements within the same subject is highly desirable and can lead to higher scientific rigor.

Conclusions

This report provides a proof of feasibility for multiscale imaging approaches in awake mice. In the future, this protocol could be extended to include complex cognitive behaviors translatable to humans, such as sensory discrimination or attention.

Methods

We demonstrated blood oxygenation level-dependent fMRI in awake mice implanted with long-term cranial windows that allowed optical access for microscopic imaging modalities and optogenetic stimulation. We started with two-photon imaging of single-vessel diameter changes (n = 1). Next, we implemented intrinsic optical imaging of blood oxygenation and flow combined with laser speckle imaging of blood flow obtaining a mesoscopic picture of the hemodynamic response (n = 16). Then we obtained corresponding blood oxygenation level-dependent fMRI data (n = 5). All measurements could be performed in the same mice in response to identical sensory and optogenetic stimuli.

Results

The cranial window did not deteriorate the quality of fMRI and allowed alternation between imaging modalities in each subject. Conclusions: This report provides a proof of feasibility for multiscale imaging approaches in awake mice. In the future, this protocol could be extended to include complex cognitive behaviors translatable to humans, such as sensory discrimination or attention.

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