Multimodal Assessment of Bottlenose Dolphin Auditory Nuclei Using 7-Tesla MRI, Immunohistochemistry and Stereology.
Ksenia OrekhovaEnna SelmanovicRita De GasperiMiguel A Gama SosaBridget WicinskiBrigid MaloneyAlan SeifertAkbar AlipourPriti BalchandaniTommaso GerussiJean-Marie GraïcCinzia CentellegheGiovanni Di GuardoSandro MazzariolPatrick R HofPublished in: Veterinary sciences (2022)
The importance of assessing neurochemical processes in the cetacean brain as a tool for monitoring their cognitive health and to indirectly model human neurodegenerative conditions is increasingly evident, although available data are largely semiquantitative. High-resolution MRI for post-mortem brains and stereology allow for quantitative assessments of the cetacean brain. In this study, we scanned two brains of bottlenose dolphins in a 7-Tesla (7T) MR scanner and assessed the connectivity of the inferior colliculi and ventral cochlear nuclei using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Serial thick sections were investigated stereologically in one of the dolphins to generate rigorous quantitative estimates of identifiable cell types according to their morphology and expression of molecular markers, yielding reliable cell counts with most coefficients of error <10%. Fibronectin immunoreactivity in the dolphin resembled the pattern in a human chronic traumatic encephalopathy brain, suggesting that neurochemical compensation for insults such as hypoxia may constitute a noxious response in humans, while being physiological in dolphins. These data contribute to a growing body of knowledge on the morphological and neurochemical properties of the dolphin brain and highlight a stereological and neuroimaging workflow that may enable quantitative and translational assessment of pathological processes in the dolphin brain in the future.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- white matter
- high resolution
- functional connectivity
- endothelial cells
- magnetic resonance
- healthcare
- electronic health record
- contrast enhanced
- single cell
- magnetic resonance imaging
- poor prognosis
- cerebral ischemia
- public health
- multiple sclerosis
- spinal cord
- stem cells
- early onset
- long non coding rna
- brain injury
- social media
- risk assessment
- peripheral blood
- pain management
- drug induced
- type iii