Paper
30 March 2005 Acousto-optic multiphoton laser scanning microscopy (AO-MPLSM) for structural and functional imaging in living brain slices
Vijay Iyer, Tycho Hoogland, Bradley E. Losavio, Rudy Fink, Robert Gaddi, Saumil Patel, Adam Larson, Peter Saggau
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The intrinsic optical sectioning, reduced light-scattering, and reduced photodamage of multiphoton laser-scanning microscopy (MPLSM) has generated great interest for this technique in experimental Neuroscience, as it enables to study both structure and function of fine neuronal processes within living brain tissue. At present, virtually all MPLSM systems employ galvanometric beam positioning. Due to this inertia-limited approach, single-dimension line scans are employed to achieve frame rates sufficient for functional imaging. Although such line scans allow adequate sampling rates (≤1kHz), two significant drawbacks remain. First, the majority of scan time is wasted by illuminating regions of no interest, while sacrificing signal integration time at sites-of-interest. Second, the sites from which signals can be recorded are limited to those along a single line. Alternatively, acousto-optic (AO) beam positioning with high-resolution TeO2 deflectors allows inertia-free skipping between arbitrary sites within the field-of-view in <15μs. This achieves high sampling rate recording at multiple, non-adjacent sites quasi-simultaneously (1-5kHz frame rate, 12-60 sites). Such a multi-site optical recording system would greatly advance studying complex neuronal function, by enabling membrane potential or calcium transients to be observed throughout the complex geometry of neuronal dendrites. This paper presents images and functional recordings from living neurons within brain slices, acquired with AO-MPLSM. Our novel imaging system allows a user to collect structural images first and subsequently select sites of interest for fast functional imaging. To demonstrate the system’s power, we present high-speed recordings (1kHz) from >10 sites within the dendrites of pyramidal neurons in acute brain slices, at signal-to-noise ratios comparable to line-scan systems.
© (2005) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Vijay Iyer, Tycho Hoogland, Bradley E. Losavio, Rudy Fink, Robert Gaddi, Saumil Patel, Adam Larson, and Peter Saggau "Acousto-optic multiphoton laser scanning microscopy (AO-MPLSM) for structural and functional imaging in living brain slices", Proc. SPIE 5700, Multiphoton Microscopy in the Biomedical Sciences V, (30 March 2005); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.587430
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CITATIONS
Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Neurons

Acousto-optics

Brain

Dendrites

Calcium

Functional imaging

Imaging systems

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