Methods in brain research 1.Structure a. Morphology b. Pathways 2. Function.

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Methods in brain research 1.Structure a. Morphology b. Pathways 2. Function

Transcript of Methods in brain research 1.Structure a. Morphology b. Pathways 2. Function.

Page 1: Methods in brain research 1.Structure a. Morphology b. Pathways 2. Function.

Methods in brain research

1. Structurea. Morphologyb. Pathways

2. Function

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1. Sacrificing the animal / or post-mortem studies

2. Replace the blood with saline (physiologic water)

3. Fixation – injection of formaline

Dissection

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Grey matterWhite matter

frontal section horizontal section

ventricles

Thalamus

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Nissl stain

Staining of cell bodies

Histology

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Staining of axon fibers

Hard to see individual cells

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Golgi stain

Individual cells

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Microscopy

1. Light (up to x1500 magnification)

2. Electron Microscopy (EM; magnification of ~108 in tissue slices)1. Transmission EM (high resolution 2d information)2. Scanning EM – lower resolution but provides 3d information

3. Confocal microscopy – Uses laser and fluorescent dyes. Higher resolution than light microscopy Thicker slices (3d) in living tissue

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Neural pathways

Anterograde labeling – chemicals that enter the cells (through dendrites), and travel along the axons to the terminal buttons

1. Injection of PHA-L

2. Substance is transported throughout the cell

3. Animal is sacrificed and brain is perfused

4. Histology – PHA-L is made visible through use of immunocytochemical methods

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Autoradiography – using radioactive markers for labeling

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Retrograde labeling – chemicals that enter the terminal buttons, and travel through the axons to the cell bodies

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Auditory pathway

Tracer in the thalamus

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Imaging techniques to study structure

Computerized Tomography (CT)

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

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Computed Tomography

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Computed TomographyX ray

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Computed TomographyX ray

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Computed Tomography X ray

Advantages of CT

• Accessible (and cheap)

• Efficient in detecting

• Stroke•

Hemorrhages• Tumors

• Uses X-Ray• No separation between white/grey

matter• Can only take horizontal sections

Drawbacks of CT

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Good spatial resolution (~1mm)Separation between grey/white matter

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Very strong magnetic field.Earth is ~0.5 Gauss10,000 Gauss is 1 TeslaTypical scanner today has a magnetic field of 3 Tesla

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Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA)

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Measuring proton density (from water molecules) with MRI

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Advantages:

Non-invasive (and can be used in the living brain)

High spatial resolution (~1mm)

Safe (Does not damage tissue)

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Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI)

Can NOT tell from _X_ to_Y_ - but gives the general direction of the fibers

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Tools to study brain function

1. Manipulating brain function (e.g. by lesions) and inferring a region’s role in behavior/cognition

2. Manipulating behavior and measuring changes in brain activity

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Naturally occurring lesions (stroke) or accidents (e.g. gun wounds etc.)

Broca

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Phineas Gage’s lesion reconstructed

(H. Damasio and R. Frank, 1992)

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Experimental ablation (removal of brain tissue)

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1. Suction of brain tissue

2. Destruction of brain tissue Electrically (general)Chemically (more specific)for example – use of kianic

acid to over-excite cells until they die

3. Temporary lesions (cooling)

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Recording of electrical activity / electrical stimulation of brain tissue

Spike trains

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Free recall demo for hippocampal re-activation

Gelbard-Sagiv, Mukamel, Harel, Malach & Fried. Science 2008

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Quiroga, Mukamel, Isham, Malach & Fried. PNAS 2008

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Positron emission tomography (PET) – Enables tracking metabolic processes in various brain

regionsInvolves injection of a radio-active tracerEnables scanning in multiple planes

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1. Seeing words2. Listening to words3. Saying words4. Generating verbs

PET-Positron Emission tomography

1 2

3 4

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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

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What does the BOLD fMRI signal measure?

• Hemoglobin has two states: Oxygenated (diamagnetic), andDe-Oxygenated (paramagnetic)

• The BOLD fMRI signal is sensitive to the ratio between Oxy and De-oxy hemoglobin in a manner that an increase in Oxygenated blood results in an increase in the fMRI signal.

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Following neural activation:

Consumption of oxygen

Overcompensation with fresh oxygenated blood

Time

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fMRI signal

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Advantages of fMRI over PET

• Higher temporal resolution (seconds vs min)• No radioactive radiation• cheaper