Fully autonomous mouse behavioral and optogenetic experiments in home-cage.
Yaoyao HaoAlyse Marian ThomasNuo LiPublished in: eLife (2021)
Goal-directed behaviors involve distributed brain networks. The small size of the mouse brain makes it amenable to manipulations of neural activity dispersed across brain areas, but existing optogenetic methods serially test a few brain regions at a time, which slows comprehensive mapping of distributed networks. Laborious operant conditioning training required for most experimental paradigms exacerbates this bottleneck. We present an autonomous workflow to survey the involvement of brain regions at scale during operant behaviors in mice. Naive mice living in a home-cage system learned voluntary head-fixation (>1 hr/day) and performed difficult decision-making tasks, including contingency reversals, for 2 months without human supervision. We incorporated an optogenetic approach to manipulate activity in deep brain regions through intact skull during home-cage behavior. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, we tested dozens of mice in parallel unsupervised optogenetic experiments, revealing multiple regions in cortex, striatum, and superior colliculus involved in tactile decision-making.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- white matter
- functional connectivity
- decision making
- healthcare
- cerebral ischemia
- high fat diet induced
- endothelial cells
- multiple sclerosis
- machine learning
- adipose tissue
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- high resolution
- blood brain barrier
- skeletal muscle
- cross sectional
- high density
- optic nerve
- wild type
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- virtual reality