Closed-loop two-photon functional imaging in a freely moving animal

Abstract Direct measurement of neural activity in freely moving animals is essential for understanding how the brain controls and represents behaviors. Genetically encoded calcium indicators report neural activity as changes in fluorescence intensity, but brain motion confounds quantitative measurem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paul McNulty, Rui Wu, Akihiro Yamaguchi, Ellie S. Heckscher, Andrew Haas, Amajindi Nwankpa, Mirna Mihovilovic Skanata, and Marc Gershow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Nature Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-60648-x
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Summary:Abstract Direct measurement of neural activity in freely moving animals is essential for understanding how the brain controls and represents behaviors. Genetically encoded calcium indicators report neural activity as changes in fluorescence intensity, but brain motion confounds quantitative measurement of fluorescence. Translation, rotation, and deformation of the brain and the movements of intervening scattering or autofluorescent tissue all alter the amount of fluorescent light captured by a microscope. Compared to single-photon approaches, two-photon microscopy is less sensitive to scattering and off-target fluorescence, but more sensitive to motion, and two photon imaging has always required anchoring the microscope to the brain. We developed a closed-loop resonant axial-scanning high-speed two-photon (CRASH2p) microscope for real-time 3D motion correction in unrestrained animals, without implantation of reference markers. We complemented CRASH2p with a ‘Pong’ scanning strategy and a multi-stage registration pipeline. We performed volumetric ratiometrically corrected functional imaging in the CNS of freely moving Drosophila larvae and discovered previously unknown neural correlates of behavior.
ISSN:2041-1723