Volumetric optical connectome microscopy of human cerebellar circuitry

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R00 · $248,993 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract The goal in seeking a K99/R00 Pathway to Independence Award is to establish myself as an independent principal investigator to study the structural-functional relationship of the brain circuitry in normal and brain disorders. The proposed project, driven by the need for understanding the human brain with high-resolution high-throughput tools and my extensive experience in biomedical optics for neuroimaging, aims to establish a versatile tool to reconstruct the circuitry and neuronal architecture in human cerebellum, understand the disruptive impacts of cerebellar degenerative disease, and combine with MRI models to seek novel biomarkers that will potentially influence the clinical assessment. Despite the tremendous advances of light microscopy since Santiago Ramón y Cajal's pioneering work in drafting axonal tracts, our knowledge on how the 80-100 billions of neurons connect together to form complex functions in human brain is still limited. Presently, there is no volumetric microscopy technique that can map the circuitry and architecture of human brain with high integrity. Here I propose to develop a volumetric optical connectome microscopy (VOCM), for reconstructing the human cerebellum with unprecedented resolution and scales, and mapping the connectivity and neuronal architectures from a global perspective. VOCM is based on a polarization sensitive optical coherence tomography and a vibratome slicer to image large-scale ex vivo brain at a micrometer-scale resolution. Importantly, this technology allows volumetric reconstruction preserving an ultra-high accuracy without tissue distortions; therefore overcomes the 100 years challenge of all histology based methods in tracing long fiber tracts and inspecting sophisticated cortical folding in the human brain. The high-quality data generated by VOCM will be fit into MRI models to construct an ultra-high resolution atlas of human cerebellum to provide anatomical labels that are not available in current MRI tools. By applying VOCM, the project further explores 3D pathological patterns of cerebellar disorder. Multiple system atrophy cerebellar type (MSA-C) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease manifested by severe cerebellar and brainstem atrophy. Despite its rare incidence, MSA-C shares common phenotypic characteristics with other neurological diseases. Studying the neuroanatomical substrates and pathological trajectory of MSA-C could advance our understanding of the impact of cerebellar disorders and cerebellar affected diseases. Particularly, the project will characterize the architecture and circuitry disruptions associated with neurodegeneration in MSA-C. We will then use the high-resolution ex vivo dataset to make predictions in vivo, and allow an MRI assessment that would not be possible otherwise. The proposed research is conducted at Martinos Center, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), which is an ideal environment developing cutting edge biomedical technologies and...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10245316
Project number
5R00EB023993-04
Recipient
MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Principal Investigator
Hui Wang
Activity code
R00
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$248,993
Award type
5
Project period
2020-08-08 → 2023-04-30