Assembly and operation of the autopatcher for automated intracellular neural recording in vivo
This protocol describes how to set up and use the autopatcher, a robot that automatically obtains intracellular neural recordings from intact mammalian mouse brains. Whole-cell patch clamping in vivo is an important neuroscience technique that uniquely provides access to both suprathreshold spiking...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature protocols 2016-04, Vol.11 (4), p.634-654 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | This protocol describes how to set up and use the autopatcher, a robot that automatically obtains intracellular neural recordings from intact mammalian mouse brains.
Whole-cell patch clamping
in vivo
is an important neuroscience technique that uniquely provides access to both suprathreshold spiking and subthreshold synaptic events of single neurons in the brain. This article describes how to set up and use the autopatcher, which is a robot for automatically obtaining high-yield and high-quality whole-cell patch clamp recordings
in vivo
. By following this protocol, a functional experimental rig for automated whole-cell patch clamping can be set up in 1 week. High-quality surgical preparation of mice takes ∼1 h, and each autopatching experiment can be carried out over periods lasting several hours. Autopatching should enable
in vivo
intracellular investigations to be accessible by a substantial number of neuroscience laboratories, and it enables labs that are already doing
in vivo
patch clamping to scale up their efforts by reducing training time for new lab members and increasing experimental durations by handling mentally intensive tasks automatically. |
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ISSN: | 1754-2189 1750-2799 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nprot.2016.007 |