Paper
2 March 2017 In vivo three-photon activity imaging of GCaMP6-labeled neurons in deep cortex and the hippocampus of the mouse brain
Tianyu Wang, Dimitre G. Ouzounov, Mengran Wang, Danielle Feng, Jean C. Cruz-Hernandez, Jacob Reimer, Andreas Tolias, Nozomi Nishimura, Chris Xu
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We demonstrate that three-photon microscopy (3PM) with 1300-nm excitation enables functional imaging of GCaMP6s labeled neurons beyond the depth limit of two-photon microscopy (2PM) with 920-nm excitation. We quantitatively compared 2PM and 3PM imaging of calcium indicator GCaMP6s by measuring correlation between activity traces, absolute signal level, excitation attenuation with depth, and signal-to-background ratio (SBR). Compared to 2PM imaging of GCaMP6s-labeled neurons, 3PM imaging has increasingly larger advantages in signal strength and SBR as the imaging depth increases in densely labeled mouse brain, given the same pulse energy, pulse width, and repetition rate at the sample surface. For example, 3PM has comparable signal strength as 2PM and up to two orders of magnitude higher SBR as 2PM in mouse cortex around 700-800um. We also demonstrate 3PM activity recording of 150 neurons in the hippocampal stratum pyramidale (SP) at 1mm depth, which is inaccessible to non-invasive 2PM imaging. Our work establishes 3PM as a powerful tool for calcium imaging at the depth beyond 2PM limits.
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Tianyu Wang, Dimitre G. Ouzounov, Mengran Wang, Danielle Feng, Jean C. Cruz-Hernandez, Jacob Reimer, Andreas Tolias, Nozomi Nishimura, and Chris Xu "In vivo three-photon activity imaging of GCaMP6-labeled neurons in deep cortex and the hippocampus of the mouse brain", Proc. SPIE 10069, Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences XVII, 100692L (2 March 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2251220
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KEYWORDS
Neurons

Signal attenuation

Brain

Calcium

In vivo imaging

Neuroimaging

Functional imaging

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