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1.
Two‐photon microscopy (2PM) is one of the most widely used tools for in vivo deep tissue imaging. However, the spatial resolution and penetration depth are still limited due to the strong scattering background. Here we demonstrate a two‐photon focal modulation microscopy. By utilizing the modulation and demodulation techniques, background rejection capability is enhanced, thus spatial resolution and imaging penetration depth are improved. Compared with 2PM, the transverse resolution is increased by 70%, while the axial resolution is increased to 2‐fold. Furthermore, when applied in conventional 2PM mode, it can achieve inertial‐free scanning in either transverse or axial direction with in principle unlimited scanning speed. Finally, we applied 2PFMM in thick scattering samples to further examine the imaging performance. The results show that the signal‐to‐background ratio of 2PFMM can be improved up to five times of 2PM at the depth of 500 μm. Fluorescent imaging in the mouse brain tissue. 3D Thy1‐GFP hippocampal neurons imaged by (A) 2PM compared with (B) 2PFMM; (C‐H) xy maximum‐intensity projection imaged by 2PM compared with 2PFMM. Scale bar 50 μm.   相似文献   

2.
Myh9 and Myh10, which encode two major isoforms of non‐muscle myosin II expressed in the brain, have emerged as risk factors for developmental brain disorders. Myosin II motors regulate neuronal cytoskeletal dynamics leading to optimization of synaptic plasticity and memory formation. However, the role of these motor complexes in brain development remains poorly understood. Here, we disrupted the in vivo expression of Myh9 and/or Myh10 in developing hippocampal neurons to determine how these motors contribute to circuit maturation in this brain area important for cognition. We found that Myh10 ablation in early postnatal, but not mature, CA1 pyramidal neurons reduced excitatory synaptic function in the Schaffer collateral pathway, whereas more distal inputs to CA1 neurons were relatively unaffected. Myh10 ablation in young neurons also selectively impaired the elongation of oblique dendrites that receive Schaffer collateral inputs, whereas the structure of distal dendrites was normal. We observed normal spine density and spontaneous excitatory currents in these neurons, indicating that Myh10 KO impaired proximal pathway synaptic maturation through disruptions to dendritic development rather than post‐synaptic strength or spine morphogenesis. To address possible redundancy and/or compensation by other Myosin II motors expressed in neurons, we performed similar experiments in Myh9 null neurons. In contrast to findings in Myh10 mutants, evoked synaptic function in young Myh9 KO hippocampal neurons was normal. Data obtained from double Myh9/Myh10 KO neurons largely resembled the MyH10 KO synaptic phenotype. These data indicate that Myosin IIB is a key molecular factor that guides input‐specific circuit maturation in the developing hippocampus.

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3.
4.
Optical imaging is a key modality for observing biological specimen with higher spatial resolution. However, scattering and absorption of light in tissues are inherent barriers in maximizing imaging depth in biological tissues. To achieve this goal, use of light at near‐infrared spectrum can improve the present situation. Here, the capability of saturated two‐photon saturated excitation (TP‐SAX) fluorescence microscopy to image at depths of >2.0 mm, with submicron resolution in transparent mouse brain imaging, is demonstrated. At such depths with scattering‐enlarged point spread function (PSF), we find that TP‐SAX is capable to provide spatial resolution improvement compared to its corresponding TPFM, which is on the other hand already providing a much improved resolution compared with single‐photon confocal fluorescence microscopy. With the capability to further improve spatial resolution at such deep depth with scattering‐enlarged PSF, TP‐SAX can be used for exquisite visualization of delicate cerebral neural structure in the scattering regime with a submicron spatial resolution inside intact mouse brain.   相似文献   

5.
Optical coherence tomography (OCT), enables high‐resolution 3D imaging of the morphology of light scattering tissues. From the OCT signal, parameters can be extracted and related to tissue structures. One of the quantitative parameters is the attenuation coefficient; the rate at which the intensity of detected light decays in depth. To couple the quantitative parameters with the histology one‐to‐one registration is needed. The primary aim of this study is to validate a registration method of quantitative OCT parameters to histological tissue outcome through one‐to‐one registration of OCT with histology. We matched OCT images of unstained fixated prostate tissue slices with corresponding histology slides, wherein different histologic types were demarcated. Attenuation coefficients were determined by a supervised automated exponential fit (corrected for point spread function and sensitivity roll‐off related signal losses) over a depth of 0.32 mm starting from 0.10 mm below the automatically detected tissue edge. Finally, the attenuation coefficients corresponding to the different tissue types of the prostate were compared. From the attenuation coefficients, we produced the squared relative residue and goodness‐of‐fit metric R2. This article explains the method to perform supervised automated quantitative analysis of OCT data, and the one‐to‐one registration of OCT extracted quantitative data with histopathological outcomes.   相似文献   

6.
Drebrin is a major F‐actin binding protein in dendritic spines that is critically involved in the regulation of dendritic spine morphogenesis, pathology, and plasticity. In this study, we aimed to identify a novel drebrin‐binding protein involved in spine morphogenesis and synaptic plasticity. We confirmed the beta subunit of Ca2+/calmodulin‐dependent protein kinase II (CaMKIIβ) as a drebrin‐binding protein using a yeast two‐hybrid system, and investigated the drebrin–CaMKIIβ relationship in dendritic spines using rat hippocampal neurons. Drebrin knockdown resulted in diffuse localization of CaMKIIβ in dendrites during the resting state, suggesting that drebrin is involved in the accumulation of CaMKIIβ in dendritic spines. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis showed that drebrin knockdown increased the stable fraction of CaMKIIβ, indicating the presence of drebrin‐independent, more stable CaMKIIβ. NMDA receptor activation also increased the stable fraction in parallel with drebrin exodus from dendritic spines. These findings suggest that CaMKIIβ can be classified into distinct pools: CaMKIIβ associated with drebrin, CaMKIIβ associated with post‐synaptic density (PSD), and CaMKIIβ free from PSD and drebrin. CaMKIIβ appears to be anchored to a protein complex composed of drebrin‐binding F‐actin during the resting state. NMDA receptor activation releases CaMKIIβ from drebrin resulting in CaMKIIβ association with PSD.

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7.
Drebrin an actin‐bundling key regulator of dendritic spine genesis and morphology, has been recently proposed as a regulator of hippocampal glutamatergic activity which is critical for memory formation and maintenance. Here, we examined the effects of genetic deletion of drebrin on dendritic spine and on the level of complexes containing major brain receptors. To this end, homozygous and heterozygous drebrin knockout mice generated in our laboratory and related wild‐type control animals were studied. Level of protein complexes containing dopamine receptor D1/dopamine receptor D2, 5‐hydroxytryptamine receptor 1A (5‐HT1AR), and 5‐hydroxytryptamine receptor 7 (5‐HT7R) were significantly reduced in hippocampus of drebrin knockout mice whereas no significant changes were detected for GluR1, 2, and 3 and NR1 as examined by native gel‐based immunoblotting. Drebrin depletion also altered dendritic spine formation, morphology, and reduced levels of dopamine receptor D1 in dendritic spines as evaluated using immunohistochemistry/confocal microscopy. Electrophysiological studies further showed significant reduction in memory‐related hippocampal synaptic plasticity upon drebrin depletion. These findings provide unprecedented experimental support for a role of drebrin in the regulation of memory‐related synaptic plasticity and neurotransmitter receptor signaling, offer relevant information regarding the interpretation of previous studies and help in the design of future studies on dendritic spines.

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8.
The non‐selective cationic transient receptor canonical 6 (TRPC6) channels are involved in synaptic plasticity changes ranging from dendritic growth, spine morphology changes and increase in excitatory synapses. We previously showed that the TRPC6 activator hyperforin, the active antidepressant component of St. John's wort, induces neuritic outgrowth and spine morphology changes in PC12 cells and hippocampal CA1 neurons. However, the signaling cascade that transmits the hyperforin‐induced transient rise in intracellular calcium into neuritic outgrowth is not yet fully understood. Several signaling pathways are involved in calcium transient‐mediated changes in synaptic plasticity, ranging from calmodulin‐mediated Ras‐induced signaling cascades comprising the mitogen‐activated protein kinase, PI3K signal transduction pathways as well as Ca2+/calmodulin‐dependent protein kinase II (CAMKII) and CAMKIV. We show that several mechanisms are involved in TRPC6‐mediated synaptic plasticity changes in PC12 cells and primary hippocampal neurons. Influx of calcium via TRPC6 channels activates different pathways including Ras/mitogen‐activated protein kinase/extracellular signal‐regulated kinases, phosphatidylinositide 3‐kinase/protein kinase B, and CAMKIV in both cell types, leading to cAMP‐response element binding protein phosphorylation. These findings are interesting not only in terms of the downstream targets of TRPC6 channels but also because of their potential to facilitate further understanding of St. John's wort extract‐mediated antidepressant activity.

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9.
Methods of nonlinear optics provide a vast arsenal of tools for label‐free brain imaging, offering a unique combination of chemical specificity, the ability to detect fine morphological features, and an unprecedentedly high, subdiffraction spatial resolution. While these techniques provide a rapidly growing platform for the microscopy of neurons and fine intraneural structures, optical imaging of astroglia still largely relies on filament‐protein‐antibody staining, subject to limitations and difficulties especially severe in live‐brain studies. Once viewed as an ancillary, inert brain scaffold, astroglia are being promoted, as a part of an ongoing paradigm shift in neurosciences, into the role of a key active agent of intercellular communication and information processing, playing a significant role in brain functioning under normal and pathological conditions. Here, we show that methods of nonlinear optics provide a unique resource to address long‐standing challenges in label‐free astroglia imaging. We demonstrate that, with a suitable beam‐focusing geometry and careful driver‐pulse compression, microscopy of second‐harmonic generation (SHG) can enable a high‐resolution label‐free imaging of fibrillar structures of astrocytes, most notably astrocyte processes and their endfeet. SHG microscopy of astrocytes is integrated in our approach with nonlinear‐optical imaging of red blood cells based on third‐harmonic generation (THG) enhanced by a three‐photon resonance with the Soret band of hemoglobin. With astroglia and red blood cells providing two physically distinct imaging contrasts in SHG and THG channels, a parallel detection of the second and third harmonics enables a high‐contrast, high‐resolution, stain‐free stereoimaging of gliovascular interfaces in the central nervous system. Transverse scans of the second and third harmonics are shown to resolve an ultrafine texture of blood‐vessel walls and astrocyte‐process endfeet on gliovascular interfaces with a spatial resolution within 1 μm at focusing depths up to 20 μm inside a brain.  相似文献   

10.
Cholinergic neurons in the CNS are involved in synaptic plasticity and cognition. Both muscarinic and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) influence plasticity and cognitive function. The mechanism underlying nAChR‐induced plasticity, however, has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate morphological changes in dendritic spines following activation of α4β2* nAChRs, which are expressed on glutamatergic pre‐synaptic termini of cultured hippocampal neurons. Exposure of the neurons to nicotine resulted in a lateral enlargement of spine heads. This was abolished by dihydro‐β‐erythroidine, an antagonist of α4β2* nAChRs, but not by α‐bungarotoxin, an antagonist of α7 nAChRs. Tetanus toxin or a mixture of 2‐amino‐5‐phosphonovaleric acid and 6‐cyano‐7‐nitroquinoxaline‐2,3‐dione, antagonists of NMDA‐ and AMPA‐type glutamate receptors, blocked the nicotine‐induced spine remodeling. In addition, nicotine exerted full spine‐enlarging response in the post‐synaptic neuron whose β2 nAChR expression was knocked down. Finally, pre‐treatment with nicotine enhanced the Ca2+‐response of the neurons to glutamate. These data suggest that nicotine influences the activity of glutamatergic neurotransmission through the activation of pre‐synaptic α4β2 nAChRs, resulting in the modulation of spinal architecture and responsiveness. The present findings may represent one of the cellular mechanisms underlying cholinergic tuning of brain function.

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11.
The side lobes of Bessel beam will create significant out‐of‐focus background when scanned in light‐sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM), limiting the axial resolution of the imaging system. Here, we propose to overcome this issue by scanning the sample twice with zeroth‐order Bessel beam and another type of propagation‐invariant beam, complementary to the zeroth‐order Bessel beam, which greatly reduces the out‐of‐focus background created in the first scan. The axial resolution can be improved from 1.68 μm of the Bessel light‐sheet to 1.07 μm by subtraction of the two scanned images across a whole field‐of‐view of up to 300 μm × 200 μm × 200 μm. The optimization procedure to create the complementary beam is described in detail and it is experimentally generated with a spatial light modulator. The imaging performance is validated experimentally with fluorescent beads as well as eGFP‐labeled mouse brain neurons.   相似文献   

12.
Optical coupling between a single, individually addressable neuron and a properly designed optical fiber is demonstrated. Two‐photon imaging is shown to enable a quantitative in situ analysis of such fiber–single‐neuron coupling in the live brain of transgenic mice. Fiber‐optic interrogation of single pyramidal neurons in mouse brain cortex is performed with the positioning of the fiber probe relative to the neuron accurately mapped by means of two‐photon imaging. These results pave the way for fiber‐optic interfaces to single neurons for a stimulation and interrogation of individually addressable brain cells in chronic in vivo studies on freely behaving transgenic animal models, as well as the integration of fiber‐optic single‐neuron stimulation into the optical imaging framework.

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13.
Fluorescence imaging in the second near‐infrared optical window (NIR‐II, 900‐1700 nm) has become a technique of choice for noninvasive in vivo imaging in recent years. Greater penetration depths with high spatial resolution and low background can be achieved with this NIR‐II window, owing to low autofluorescence within this optical range and reduced scattering of long wavelength photons. Here, we present a novel design of confocal laser scanning microscope tailored for imaging in the NIR‐II window. We showcase the outstanding penetration depth of our confocal setup with a series of imaging experiments. HeLa cells labeled with PbS quantum dots with a peak emission wavelength of 1276 nm can be visualized through a 3.5‐mm‐thick layer of scattering medium, which is a 0.8% Lipofundin solution. A commercially available organic dye IR‐1061 (emission peak at 1132 nm), in its native form, is used for the first time, as a NIR‐II fluorescence label in cellular imaging. Our confocal setup is capable of capturing optically sectioned images of IR‐1061 labeled chondrocytes in fixed animal cartilage at a depth up to 800 μm, with a superb spatial resolution of around 2 μm.   相似文献   

14.
Recent studies have highlighted the role of mitochondria in dendritic protrusion growth and plasticity. However, the detailed mechanisms that mitochondria regulate dendritic filopodia morphogenesis remain elusive. Cyclophilin D (CypD, gene name: Ppif ) controls the opening of mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Although the pathological relevance of CypD has been intensively investigated, little is known about its physiological function in neurons. Here, we have found that genetic depletion of or pharmaceutical inhibition of CypD blunts the outgrowth of dendritic filopodia in response to KC l‐stimulated neuronal depolarization. Further cell biological studies suggest that such inhibitory effect of CypD loss‐of‐function is closely associated with compromised flexibility of dendritic mitochondrial calcium regulation during neuronal depolarization, as well as the resultant changes in intradendritic calcium homeostasis, calcium signaling activation, dendritic mitochondrial motility and redistribution. Interestingly, loss of CypD attenuates oxidative stress‐induced mitochondrial calcium perturbations and dendritic protrusion injury. Therefore, our study has revealed the physiological function of CypD in dendritic plasticity by acting as a fine‐tuner of mitochondrial calcium homeostasis. Moreover, CypD plays distinct roles in neuronal physiology and pathology.

Cover Image for this issue: doi: 10.1111/jnc.14189 .
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15.
We investigate the use of spatially resolved diffuse imaging to track a fluid jet delivered at high speed into skin tissue. A jet injector with a short needle to deliver drugs beneath the dermis, is modified to incorporate a laser beam into the jet, which is ejected into ex vivo porcine tissue. The diffuse light emitted from the side and top of the tissue sample is recorded using high‐speed videography. Similar experiments, using a depth‐controlled fiber optic source, generate a reference dataset. The side light distribution is related to source depth for the controlled‐source experiments and used to track the effective source depth of the injections. Postinjection X‐ray images show agreement between the jet penetration and ultimate light source depth. The surface light intensity profile is parameterized with a single parameter and an exponential function is used to relate this parameter to source depth for the controlled‐source data. This empirical model is then used to estimate the effective source depth from the surface profile of the injection experiments. The depth estimates for injections into fat remain close to the side depth estimates, with a root‐mean‐square error of 1.1 mm, up to a source depth of 8 mm.   相似文献   

16.
Acquiring information of the neural structures in the whole‐brain level is vital for systematically exploring mechanisms and principles of brain function and dysfunction. Most methods for whole brain imaging, while capable of capturing the complete morphology of neurons, usually involve complex sample preparation and several days of image acquisition. The whole process including optical clearing or resin embedding is time consuming for a quick survey of the distribution of specific neural circuits in the whole brain. Here, we develop a high‐throughput light‐sheet tomography platform (HLTP), which requires minimum sample preparation. This method does not require optical clearing for block face light sheet imaging. After fixation using paraformaldehyde, an aligned 3 dimensional image dataset of a whole mouse brain can be obtained within 5 hours at a voxel size of 1.30 × 1.30 × 0.92 μm. HLTP could be a very efficient tool for quick exploration and visualization of brain‐wide distribution of specific neurons or neural circuits.   相似文献   

17.
Wide‐field optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is gaining interest in clinical imaging applications. In this pursuit, it is challenging to maintain the imaging resolution and sensitivity throughout the wide field of view (FoV). Here, we propose a novel method/system of dual‐beam arrangement and Fourier‐domain multiplexing to achieve wide‐field OCTA when imaging the uneven surface samples. The proposed system provides 2 separate FoVs, with flexibility that the imaging area, focus of the imaging beam and imaging depth range can be individually adjusted for each FoV, leading to either (1) increased system imaging FoV or (2) capability of targeting 2 regions of interests that locate at depths with large difference between each other. We demonstrate this novel method by employing 100 kHz laser source in a swept source OCTA to achieve an effective 200 kHz sweeping rate, covering a 22 × 22 mm FoV. The results are verified by a SS‐OCTA system employing a 200 kHz laser source, together with the experimental demonstrations when imaging whole brain vasculature in rodent models and skin blood perfusion in human fingers, show‐casing the capability of proposed system to image live large samples with complex surface topography.   相似文献   

18.
A compact high‐speed full‐field optical coherence microscope has been developed for high‐resolution in vivo imaging of biological tissues. The interferometer, in the Linnik configuration, has a size of 11 × 11 × 5 cm3 and a weight of 210 g. Full‐field illumination with low‐coherence light is achieved with a high‐brightness broadband light‐emitting diode. High‐speed full‐field detection is achieved by using part of the image sensor of a high‐dynamic range CMOS camera. En face tomographic images are acquired at a rate of 50 Hz, with an integration time of 0.9 ms. The image spatial resolution is 0.9 μm × 1.2 μm (axial × transverse), over a field of view of 245 × 245 μm2. Images of human skin, revealing in‐depth cellular‐level structures, were obtained in vivo and in real‐time without the need for stabilization of the subject. The system can image larger fields, up to 1 × 1 mm2, but at a reduced depth.   相似文献   

19.
Zinc (Zn2+) is believed to play a relevant role in the physiology and pathophysiology of the brain. Hence, Zn2+ homeostasis is critical and involves different classes of molecules, including Zn2+ transporters. The ubiquitous Zn2+ transporter‐1 (ZNT‐1) is a transmembrane protein that pumps cytosolic Zn2+ to the extracellular space, but its function in the central nervous system is not fully understood. Here, we show that ZNT‐1 interacts with GluN2A‐containing NMDA receptors, suggesting a role for this transporter at the excitatory glutamatergic synapse. First, we found that ZNT‐1 is highly expressed at the hippocampal postsynaptic density (PSD) where NMDA receptors are enriched. Two‐hybrid screening, coimmunoprecipitation experiments and clustering assay in COS‐7 cells demonstrated that ZNT‐1 specifically binds the GluN2A subunit of the NMDA receptor. GluN2A deletion mutants and pull‐down assays indicated GluN2A(1390–1464) domain as necessary for the binding to ZNT‐1. Most importantly, ZNT‐1/GluN2A complex was proved to be dynamic, since it was regulated by induction of synaptic plasticity. Finally, modulation of ZNT‐1 expression in hippocampal neurons determined a significant change in dendritic spine morphology, PSD‐95 clusters and GluN2A surface levels, supporting the involvement of ZNT‐1 in the dynamics of excitatory PSD.

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20.
Light‐sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) is a powerful tool for biological studies because it allows for optical sectioning of dynamic samples with superior temporal resolution. However, LSFM using 2 orthogonally co‐aligned objectives requires a special sample geometry, and volumetric imaging speed is limited due to physical sample translation. This paper describes an oblique scanning 2‐photon LSFM (OS‐2P‐LSFM) that eliminates these limitations by using a single objective near the sample and a refractive scanning‐descanning system. This system also provides improved light‐sheet confinement against scattering by using a 2‐photon Bessel beam. The OS‐2P‐LSFM hold promise for studying structural, functional and dynamic aspects of living tissues and organisms because it allows for high‐speed, translation‐free and scattering‐robust 3D imaging of large biological specimens.   相似文献   

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