4.8 Article

An adaptive optics module for deep tissue multiphoton imaging in vivo

Journal

NATURE METHODS
Volume 18, Issue 10, Pages 1259-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41592-021-01279-0

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The development of a compact adaptive optics module has enabled correction of tissue-induced aberrations in two-photon and three-photon fluorescence microscopes, allowing high-resolution imaging of synaptic structures in deep regions of the mouse brain and spinal cord, as well as somatosensory-evoked calcium responses. This advancement has facilitated structural and functional imaging deep within living organisms such as mice and zebrafish larvae.
Understanding complex biological systems requires visualizing structures and processes deep within living organisms. We developed a compact adaptive optics module and incorporated it into two- and three-photon fluorescence microscopes, to measure and correct tissue-induced aberrations. We resolved synaptic structures in deep cortical and subcortical areas of the mouse brain, and demonstrated high-resolution imaging of neuronal structures and somatosensory-evoked calcium responses in the mouse spinal cord at great depths in vivo. A compact adaptive optics module corrects aberrations in two-photon and three-photon microscopy, enabling structural and functional imaging deep in the mouse brain, the mouse spinal cord and the zebrafish larva.

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