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4 Janelia Publications
Showing 1-4 of 4 resultsImaging neuronal networks provides a foundation for understanding the nervous system, but resolving dense nanometer-scale structures over large volumes remains challenging for light microscopy (LM) and electron microscopy (EM). Here we show that X-ray holographic nano-tomography (XNH) can image millimeter-scale volumes with sub-100-nm resolution, enabling reconstruction of dense wiring in Drosophila melanogaster and mouse nervous tissue. We performed correlative XNH and EM to reconstruct hundreds of cortical pyramidal cells and show that more superficial cells receive stronger synaptic inhibition on their apical dendrites. By combining multiple XNH scans, we imaged an adult Drosophila leg with sufficient resolution to comprehensively catalog mechanosensory neurons and trace individual motor axons from muscles to the central nervous system. To accelerate neuronal reconstructions, we trained a convolutional neural network to automatically segment neurons from XNH volumes. Thus, XNH bridges a key gap between LM and EM, providing a new avenue for neural circuit discovery.
We present a method for microtubule tracking in electron microscopy volumes. Our method first identifies a sparse set of voxels that likely belong to microtubules. Similar to prior work, we then enumerate potential edges between these voxels, which we represent in a candidate graph. Tracks of microtubules are found by selecting nodes and edges in the candidate graph by solving a constrained optimization problem incorporating biological priors on microtubule structure. For this, we present a novel integer linear programming formulation, which results in speed-ups of three orders of magnitude and an increase of 53% in accuracy compared to prior art (evaluated on three 1 . 2 × 4 × 4µm volumes of Drosophila neural tissue). We also propose a scheme to solve the optimization problem in a block-wise fashion, which allows distributed tracking and is necessary to process very large electron microscopy volumes. Finally, we release a benchmark dataset for microtubule tracking, here used for training, testing and validation, consisting of eight 30 x 1000 x 1000 voxel blocks (1 . 2 × 4 × 4µm) of densely annotated microtubules in the CREMI data set (https://github.com/nilsec/micron).
Deep neural networks trained to inpaint partially occluded images show a deep understanding of image composition and have even been shown to remove objects from images convincingly. In this work, we investigate how this implicit knowledge of image composition can be be used to separate cells in densely populated microscopy images. We propose a measure for the independence of two image regions given a fully self-supervised inpainting network and separate objects by maximizing this independence. We evaluate our method on two cell segmentation datasets and show that cells can be separated completely unsupervised. Furthermore, combined with simple foreground detection, our method yields instance segmentation of similar quality to fully supervised methods.
High-resolution electron microscopy (EM) of nervous systems enables the reconstruction of neural circuits at the level of individual synaptic connections. However, for invertebrates, such as Drosophila melanogaster, it has so far been unclear whether the phenotype of neurons or synapses alone is sufficient to predict specific functional properties such as neurotransmitter identity. Here, we show that in Drosophila melanogaster artificial convolutional neural networks can confidently predict the type of neurotransmitter released at a synaptic site from EM images alone. The network successfully discriminates between six types of neurotransmitters (GABA, glutamate, acetylcholine, serotonin, dopamine, and octopamine) with an average accuracy of 87% for individual synapses and 94% for entire neurons, assuming each neuron expresses only one neurotransmitter. This result is surprising as there are often no obvious cues in the EM images that human observers can use to predict neurotransmitter identity. We apply the proposed method to quantify whether, similar to the ventral nervous system (VNS), all hemilineages in the Drosophila melanogaster brain express only one fast acting transmitter within their neurons. To test this principle, we predict the neurotransmitter identity of all identified synapses in 89 hemilineages in the Drosophila melanogaster adult brain. While the majority of our predictions show homogeneity of fast-acting neurotransmitter identity within a single hemilineage, we identify a set of hemilineages that express two fast-acting neurotransmitters with high statistical significance. As a result, our predictions are inconsistent with the hypothesis that all neurons within a hemilineage express the same fast-acting neurotransmitter in the brain of Drosophila melanogaster.