Lecture 9a Flashcards

1
Q

Computerized Tomography (CT) Scans

A

Computer assisted x ray image
lie withheld in the center of a large cylinder
X ray beam goes through head to a detector
Computer makes this into a series of pictures of brain

X rays absorbed by dense tissue like bone
Good for finding lesions
Cheap and fast

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2
Q

MRI

A

Magnets polarize hydrogen atoms to spin a certain way
Radiofrequency wave passed through body, knocks H atoms out of spin. When they return to it, they emit radiofrequency of their own
Detected
Scanner estimates the density of hydrogen. Most prevalent in fat and water.
High spatial resolution, 3d image of brain

Expensive

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3
Q

Diffusion tensor imaging DTI

A

MRI technique that measures the direction and speed of the diffusion of water molecules

Biased to see H in water molecules every few seconds

Shows where axons are in brain

Colors indicate the direction of water molecule diffusion

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4
Q

fmri

A

Detection of oxygenated blood by iron in blood. Oxygen in blood influences its magnetic properties.

Wo work, neurons need oxygenated blood therefore within 5ms of activation, there is an infusion of oxygenated blood

With a series of fMRIs you can detect changes in blood oxygenation which reflects blood flow. This correlates with neural activity.

Non invasive

Now using it to measure signaling molecules but using enzyme activated magnetic resonance contrast agents. The goal is to develop molecules that differentially affect the magnetic properties of water when they undergo specific chemical (enzymatic) reactions

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5
Q

Positron Emission Tomography (PET)

A

Radioactive compound injected

2-DG. Similar to glucose in that it is taken up by energy consuming cells but is not metabolized as easily so stays for hours

Radioactivity of 2dg captured by scanner. Computer determines which region has taken up radioactive 2dg and makes a picture of brain showing its activity.

Expensive. Must make radioactive 2dg on site as it is designed to break down fast

Now used with radioactive L dopa to see where it is taken up

Also useful to see changes in expression of receptor proteins across days. Use radioactive ligands (receptor agonists).

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6
Q

EEG

A

Macroelectrodes

measure net effect of APs of millions of cells around the electrodes

Records gross activity cross the cortex

Can be used to diagnose as certain states of consciousness and atrophy have characteristic patterns

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7
Q

Experimental ablation

A

Remove or destroy a part of the animals brain

Presumably the functions that can no longer be performed after were mediated by this brain region

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8
Q

Radiofrequency lesions

A

Pass redifrequency current through a wire at this location

heats up and burns the area

Size of lesion = duration and intensity of current

Axons also passing through get burned

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9
Q

Chemical lesions

A

Excitotoxic lesion
Glutamate agonist injection
Causes so much calcium influx = apoptosis
Axons passing through spared as lack receptors

Sham lesion
Placebo - use saline

Reversible lesion
Voltage gates sodium channel blockers (all APs stopped)
GABA receptor agonists (hyperpolarize cell bodies

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10
Q

Recording neural activity

A

Microelectrodes are thin wires that can record the activity of single neurons

Implant with stereotaxic surgery

Plugs into recording system

Chronic electrical recordings are made over an extended time period

Acute are short time (often during surgery when animal anesthetized

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11
Q

Electrical stimulation

A

Pass a current through a wire implanted in a brain
Affects everything in the area including fibers of passage
Some stimulation patterns (high f)( produce the same behavior as lesioning the area

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12
Q

Chemical stimulation

A

Use drugs
Guide cannula
Infuse drug

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13
Q

Optogenetic principles

A

Make brain cells express light activated proteins like ion channels
Take a light sensitive protein from a species (eg algae)
Take the gene for the protein
Inset into specific neurons - match it with a promotor section only that cell reads eg one for an uptake channel to that cells neurotransmitter (such as dopamine uptake channel)
Cell reads promotor and makes proteins
Can now cause the neuron to fire by shining blue light on it

ChR2 makes membrane permeable to sodium when light shone

IC++ increases chlorine when light shone

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14
Q

Optogenetic viral delivery

A

Find light sensitive protein eg algae
take genes for it
insert into hollowed virus
Insert virus into brain

infects all cells but only the ones that reads the right promotor make the proteins

Target it to

Where axons are located
Where the soma are located
The proteins they express
Whether they recently had more APs than normal

Usually pair with a florescent protein eg GFP so you can identify infected cells

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15
Q

Tracing neural networks

A

Once you know a particular region is involved in a particular function, you can ask what structures provide inputs and what receives outputs

Retrograde labeling - tracing afferents
Use chemicals like flurogold
Taken up by axons and transported back to the soma

Anterograde labelling - tracing efferent
PHLa - an anterograde tracer
Transported down towards axon terminals

In reality these days we don’t use these chemicals and instead use DNA to make the whole cell green

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16
Q

Serotaxic Surgery

A

find bregma under scalp
use this to orientate yourself and be able to find the region you want
dril and make hole for cannula

Used for

Excitotoxic lesioning
Lesion a specific type of cell
Change gene expression via virus
Implant guide cannulas to allow for infusion of drugs’
Implant microelectrodes
Implant fiberoptic cables for imaging or stimulation using optogenetic techniques