Whole-brain block-face serial microscopy tomography at subcellular resolution using FAST.
Kaoru SeirikiAtsushi KasaiTakanobu NakazawaMisaki NiuYuichiro NakaMasato TanumaHisato IgarashiKosei YamauraAtsuko Hayata-TakanoYukio AgoHitoshi HashimotoPublished in: Nature protocols (2019)
Here, we describe an optimized and detailed protocol for block-face serial microscopy tomography (FAST). FAST enables high-speed serial section fluorescence imaging of fixed brains at an axonal spatial resolution and subsequent image data processing. It renders brain-wide anatomical and functional analyses, including structural profiling of nuclear-stained brain at the single-cell level, cell-type-specific mapping with reporter animal brains and neuronal tracing with anterograde/retrograde labeling. Light-sheet fluorescence microscopy of cleared brains is advantageous in regard to imaging speed, but its spatial resolution is generally limited, whereas the opposite is true for conventional confocal microscopy. FAST offers a solution to overcome these technical limitations. This protocol describes detailed procedures for assembling the FAST hardware, sample preparation, imaging and image processing. A single imaging session takes as little as 2.4 h per mouse brain, and sample preparation requires 1 to several days, depending on pretreatments; however, multiple samples can be prepared simultaneously. We anticipate that FAST will contribute to unbiased and hypothesis-free approaches for a better understanding of brain systems.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- high speed
- single molecule
- fluorescence imaging
- resting state
- white matter
- atomic force microscopy
- single cell
- cerebral ischemia
- functional connectivity
- high throughput
- randomized controlled trial
- photodynamic therapy
- deep learning
- optical coherence tomography
- mass spectrometry
- rna seq
- spinal cord injury
- label free
- big data
- optic nerve