Research groups led by Prof. BI Guoqiang, University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), and Prof. ZHOU Pengcheng from Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology of Chinese Academy of Chinese proposed a design for ultra-compact head-mounted fluorescence microscopes, which were applied to neuro observations. The study was published on National Science Rivew.
Head-mounted microscopes are applied for calcium imaging in freely behaving animals. However, space and weight constraints remain a barrier. In this study, researchers proposed a Tightly Integrated Neuronal Imaging microscope (TINIscope) with optimized optical, electronic and mechanic designs. Weighing 0.43g, TINIscope is the lightest among current head-mounted microscopes. Owe to its compactness, TINIscope is capable of multi-region calcium imaging.
The design of TIMIscope and four-region imaging (image from XUE Feng et al.)
Instead of using a serializer chip, the image sensor directly transmitted serialized data, thus cutting much of the size. Some other components were also cut, with only essential parts left. The shrunk sensor allowed an optimized illumination design to further reduce distance between optical components.
TINIscope applied a novel design with the placement of the CMOS sensor on the side and LED excitation on the top. With dichroic mirrors applied to reflect emission fluorescence to sensors, multiple TINIscope could be rotated to spatially distribute their sensors. Therefore, multi-region imaging was reached. Finally, a commutator was developed to prevent entanglement caused by the motion of the mouse.
In the experiment, the calcium-sensitive fluorescent protein GCaMP6s was applied and each of four hippocampal subregions of a mouse was implanted a GRIN lens. The equipment of TINIscope turned out to have no obvious impact on the mice’s behaviors.
A T-maze test and a modified open field arena test were then conducted, and mutual information analysis was used to identify neurons exhibiting spatial tuning. The results showed that the recorded regions all contained spatially tuned neurons with a proportion of approximately 20%.
Taking advantage of the compactness of TINIscope, other modules could be combined to reach multi-modal experiments. Researchers integrated TINIscope with optogenetic stimulation and electrical stimulation and recorded the neurons that responded to stimulations.
Calcium imaging in conjunction with electrode recordings in the same brain region was also carried out, which was able to detect distinct waveforms that propagated in the hippocampus such as sharp-wave ripples.
paper link: https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwad294
(Written by SHI Yutian, edited by HUANG Rui, USTC News Center)