TY - JOUR
T1 - Minimally invasive, wide-field two-photon imaging of the brainstem at cellular resolution
AU - Agetsuma, Masakazu
AU - Hatakeyama, Azumi
AU - Yamada, Daisuke
AU - Kuniishi, Hiroshi
AU - Ito, Chihiro
AU - Takeuchi, Eri
AU - Tsuji, Shinji
AU - Tsutsumi, Motosuke
AU - Ichiki, Takako
AU - Otomo, Kohei
AU - Yoshioka, Toshinori
AU - Kobayashi, Tomoko
AU - Noritake, Atsushi
AU - Aoki, Yoshitsugu
AU - Nemoto, Tomomi
AU - Yukawa, Hiroshi
AU - Saitoh, Akiyoshi
AU - Nabekura, Junichi
AU - Sekiguchi, Masayuki
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025/4/21
Y1 - 2025/4/21
N2 - Brain-viscera communication is crucial for regulating mental health, with the vagus nerve being a key structure mediating this interaction. Clinically, artificial vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is used to treat various neuropsychiatric disorders, highlighting the importance of vagal afferent fibers in emotion regulation. The nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) is a brainstem structure proposed to receive signals from vagal afferents and relay them to brain networks for emotion regulation. However, due to the anatomical complexity and difficulty in accessing the deep-brain NTS region in vivo, its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we developed a wide-field and deep-brain two-photon imaging method using a double-prism optical interface. This approach enables cellular-resolution imaging to specifically detect NTS neural activity while largely preserving the overlying cerebellum, a region also implicated in emotion regulation. We evaluated NTS neuronal responses to VNS and a gastrointestinal hormone, demonstrating the method's utility for investigating the vagus-NTS pathway in vivo.
AB - Brain-viscera communication is crucial for regulating mental health, with the vagus nerve being a key structure mediating this interaction. Clinically, artificial vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is used to treat various neuropsychiatric disorders, highlighting the importance of vagal afferent fibers in emotion regulation. The nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) is a brainstem structure proposed to receive signals from vagal afferents and relay them to brain networks for emotion regulation. However, due to the anatomical complexity and difficulty in accessing the deep-brain NTS region in vivo, its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we developed a wide-field and deep-brain two-photon imaging method using a double-prism optical interface. This approach enables cellular-resolution imaging to specifically detect NTS neural activity while largely preserving the overlying cerebellum, a region also implicated in emotion regulation. We evaluated NTS neuronal responses to VNS and a gastrointestinal hormone, demonstrating the method's utility for investigating the vagus-NTS pathway in vivo.
KW - CP: Imaging
KW - CP: Neuroscience
KW - brain-viscera communication
KW - brainstem
KW - emotion
KW - in vivo two-photon calcium imaging
KW - nucleus tractus solitarii
KW - vagus nerve stimulation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001822426&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.crmeth.2025.101010
DO - 10.1016/j.crmeth.2025.101010
M3 - 学術論文
AN - SCOPUS:105001822426
SN - 2667-2375
VL - 5
JO - Cell Reports Methods
JF - Cell Reports Methods
IS - 4
M1 - 101010
ER -