Hierarchical imaging and computational analysis of three-dimensional vascular network architecture in the entire postnatal and adult mouse brain.
Thomas WälchliJeroen BisschopArttu MiettinenAlexandra Ulmann-SchulerChristoph HintermüllerEric P MeyerThomas KruckerRegula WälchliPhilippe P MonnierPeter CarmelietJohannes VogelMarco StampanoniPublished in: Nature protocols (2021)
The formation of new blood vessels and the establishment of vascular networks are crucial during brain development, in the adult healthy brain, as well as in various diseases of the central nervous system. Here, we describe a step-by-step protocol for our recently developed method that enables hierarchical imaging and computational analysis of vascular networks in postnatal and adult mouse brains. The different stages of the procedure include resin-based vascular corrosion casting, scanning electron microscopy, synchrotron radiation and desktop microcomputed tomography imaging, and computational network analysis. Combining these methods enables detailed visualization and quantification of the 3D brain vasculature. Network features such as vascular volume fraction, branch point density, vessel diameter, length, tortuosity and directionality as well as extravascular distance can be obtained at any developmental stage from the early postnatal to the adult brain. This approach can be used to provide a detailed morphological atlas of the entire mouse brain vasculature at both the postnatal and the adult stage of development. Our protocol allows the characterization of brain vascular networks separately for capillaries and noncapillaries. The entire protocol, from mouse perfusion to vessel network analysis, takes ~10 d.
Keyphrases
- network analysis
- electron microscopy
- resting state
- white matter
- high resolution
- preterm infants
- randomized controlled trial
- functional connectivity
- childhood cancer
- computed tomography
- multiple sclerosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- radiation therapy
- minimally invasive
- brain injury
- photodynamic therapy
- cerebrospinal fluid
- contrast enhanced
- radiation induced