4.5 Article

MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING AND MICRO-COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY COMBINED ATLAS OF DEVELOPING AND ADULT MOUSE BRAINS FOR STEREOTAXIC SURGERY

Journal

NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 162, Issue 4, Pages 1339-1350

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.05.070

Keywords

brain; stereotaxic atlas; diffusion tensor MRI; micro-CT; mouse

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1EB003543, R01ES012665, RO1AG20012, F141RR15241]

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Stereotaxic atlases of the mouse brain are important in neuroscience research for targeting of specific internal brain structures during surgical operations. The effectiveness of stereotaxic surgery depends on accurate mapping of the brain structures relative to landmarks on the skull. During postnatal development in the mouse, rapid growth-related changes in the brain occur concurrently with growth of bony plates at the cranial sutures, therefore adult mouse brain atlases cannot be used to precisely guide stereotaxis in developing brains. In this study, three-dimensional stereotaxic atlases of C57BL/6J mouse brains at six postnatal developmental stages: postnatal day (P) 7, P14, P21, P28, P63 and in adults (P140-P160) were developed, using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and micro-computed tomography (CT). At present, most widely-used stereotaxic atlases of the mouse brain are based on histology, but the anatomical fidelity of ex vivo atlases to in vivo mouse brains has not been evaluated previously. To account for ex vivo tissue distortion due to fixation as well as individual variability in the brain, we developed a population-averaged in vivo magnetic resonance imaging adult mouse brain stereotaxic atlas, and a distortion-corrected DTI atlas was generated by nonlinearly warping ex vivo data to the population-averaged in vivo atlas. These atlas resources were developed and made available through a new software user-interface with the objective of improving the accuracy of targeting brain structures during stereotaxic surgery in developing and adult C57BL/6J mouse brains. (C) 2009 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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