Extended field-of-view ultrathin microendoscopes for high-resolution two-photon imaging with minimal invasiveness

  • Andrea Antonini (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Andrea Sattin (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Monica Moroni
  • Serena Bovetti
  • Claudio Moretti
  • Francesca Succol
  • Angelo Forli
  • Dania Vecchia
  • Vijayakumar P Rajamanickam
  • Andrea Bertoncini
  • Stefano Panzeri
  • Carlo Liberale
  • Tommaso Fellin

Abstract

Imaging neuronal activity with high and homogeneous spatial resolution across the field-of-view (FOV) and limited invasiveness in deep brain regions is fundamental for the progress of neuroscience, yet is a major technical challenge. We achieved this goal by correcting optical aberrations in gradient index lens-based ultrathin (≤500 µm) microendoscopes using aspheric microlenses generated through 3D-microprinting. Corrected microendoscopes had extended FOV (eFOV) with homogeneous spatial resolution for two-photon fluorescence imaging and required no modification of the optical set-up. Synthetic calcium imaging data showed that, compared to uncorrected endoscopes, eFOV-microendoscopes led to improved signal-to-noise ratio and more precise evaluation of correlated neuronal activity. We experimentally validated these predictions in awake head-fixed mice. Moreover, using eFOV-microendoscopes we demonstrated cell-specific encoding of behavioral state-dependent information in distributed functional subnetworks in a primary somatosensory thalamic nucleus. eFOV-microendoscopes are, therefore, small-cross-section ready-to-use tools for deep two-photon functional imaging with unprecedentedly high and homogeneous spatial resolution.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummere58882
ISSN2050-084X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 13.10.2020
Extern publiziertJa

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2020, Antonini et al.

PubMed 33048047