A high-throughput neurohistological pipeline for brain-wide mesoscale connectivity mapping of the common marmoset

Understanding the connectivity architecture of entire vertebrate brains is a fundamental but difficult task. Here we present an integrated neuro-histological pipeline as well as a grid-based tracer injection strategy for systematic mesoscale connectivity mapping in the common marmoset ( ). Individua...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2019-02, Vol.8
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Meng Kuan, Takahashi, Yeonsook Shin, Huo, Bing-Xing, Hanada, Mitsutoshi, Nagashima, Jaimi, Hata, Junichi, Tolpygo, Alexander S, Ram, Keerthi, Lee, Brian C, Miller, Michael I, Rosa, Marcello Gp, Sasaki, Erika, Iriki, Atsushi, Okano, Hideyuki, Mitra, Partha
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the connectivity architecture of entire vertebrate brains is a fundamental but difficult task. Here we present an integrated neuro-histological pipeline as well as a grid-based tracer injection strategy for systematic mesoscale connectivity mapping in the common marmoset ( ). Individual brains are sectioned into ~1700 20 µm sections using the tape transfer technique, permitting high quality 3D reconstruction of a series of histochemical stains (Nissl, myelin) interleaved with tracer labeled sections. Systematic in-vivo MRI of the individual animals facilitates injection placement into reference-atlas defined anatomical compartments. Further, by combining the resulting 3D volumes, containing informative cytoarchitectonic markers, with in-vivo and ex-vivo MRI, and using an integrated computational pipeline, we are able to accurately map individual brains into a common reference atlas despite the significant individual variation. This approach will facilitate the systematic assembly of a mesoscale connectivity matrix together with unprecedented 3D reconstructions of brain-wide projection patterns in a primate brain.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.40042