4.4 Article

In vivo Calcium Imaging of Mouse Geniculate Ganglion Neuron Responses to Taste Stimuli

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 168, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/62172

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Funding

  1. UTSA's Brain Health Consortium Graduate and Postdoctoral Seed Grant [NIH-SC2-GM130411]

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Advances in genetically encoded calcium indicators (GECIs) have revolutionized in vivo functional imaging by monitoring the responses of individual cells to various stimuli in real time. Imaging the taste-evoked responses of geniculate ganglion neurons with GCaMP has provided important information about their tuning profiles and detecting taste miswiring phenotypes. This technique is a powerful tool for monitoring the activity of peripheral gustatory neurons and complements traditional methods like whole-nerve chorda tympani recordings or taste behavior assays.
Within the last ten years, advances in genetically encoded calcium indicators (GECIs) have promoted a revolution in in vivo functional imaging. Using calcium as a proxy for neuronal activity, these techniques provide a way to monitor the responses of individual cells within large neuronal ensembles to a variety of stimuli in real time. We, and others, have applied these techniques to image the responses of individual geniculate ganglion neurons to taste stimuli applied to the tongues of live anesthetized mice. The geniculate ganglion is comprised of the cell bodies of gustatory neurons innervating the anterior tongue and palate as well as some somatosensory neurons innervating the pinna of the ear. Imaging the taste-evoked responses of individual geniculate ganglion neurons with GCaMP has provided important information about the tuning profiles of these neurons in wild-type mice as well as a way to detect peripheral taste miswiring phenotypes in genetically manipulated mice. Here we demonstrate the surgical procedure to expose the geniculate ganglion, GCaMP fluorescence image acquisition, initial steps for data analysis, and troubleshooting. This technique can be used with transgenically encoded GCaMP, or with AAV-mediated GCaMP expression, and can be modified to image particular genetic subsets of interest (i.e., Cre-mediated GCaMP expression). Overall, in vivo calcium imaging of geniculate ganglion neurons is a powerful technique for monitoring the activity of peripheral gustatory neurons and provides complementary information to more traditional whole-nerve chorda tympani recordings or taste behavior assays.

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