Exploring the brain on multiple scales with correlative two-photon and light sheet microscopy
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
One of the unique features of the brain is that its activity cannot be framed in a single spatio-temporal scale, but rather spans many orders of magnitude both in space and time. A single imaging technique can reveal only a small part of this complex machinery. To obtain a more comprehensive view of brain functionality, complementary approaches should be combined into a correlative framework. Here, we describe a method to integrate data from in vivo two-photon fluorescence imaging and ex vivo light sheet microscopy, taking advantage of blood vessels as reference chart. We show how the apical dendritic arbor of a single cortical pyramidal neuron imaged in living thy1-GFP-M mice can be found in the large-scale brain reconstruction obtained with light sheet microscopy. Starting from the apical portion, the whole pyramidal neuron can then be segmented. The correlative approach presented here allows contextualizing within a three-dimensional anatomic framework the neurons whose dynamics have been observed with high detail in vivo.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Two-photon fluorescence microscopy; light sheet microscopy; correlative microscopy; brain imaging
List of contributors:
Pavone, FRANCESCO SAVERIO; Sacconi, Leonardo; ALLEGRA MASCARO, ANNA LETIZIA; Silvestri, Ludovico
Book title:
Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences XIV
Published in: