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Augmenting Wiring Diagrams of Neural Circuits with Activity in Larval Drosophila


Type

Thesis

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Authors

Abstract

Neural circuit models explain an animal's behavior as evoked activity of different circuit elements of its nervous system. Synaptic wiring diagrams mapped from structural imaging of nervous systems guide modeling of neural circuits on the basis of connectivity. However, connectivity alone may not sufficiently constrain the set of plausible circuit hypotheses for empirical study. Combining structural imaging of synaptic connectivity with functional information from activity imaging can further constrain these hypotheses to create unequivocal neural circuit models. This thesis develops computational methods and tools to cross-reference structural and activity imaging of explant larval Drosophila central nervous systems at cellular resolution. Augmenting synaptic wiring diagrams with activity maps via these methods relates circuit structure and function at the neuronal level on a per-behavior basis.

Neuronal activity of larval central nervous systems expressing pan-neuronal calcium indicators is imaged in a light sheet microscope, which are then structurally imaged with high throughput electron microscopy. Methods and tools are provided for the assembly of these image volumes, spatial registration between imaging modalities, automated detection of relevant tissue and cellular structures in each, extraction of activity time series, and morphological identification of neurons in structural imaging using reference wiring diagrams mapped from other larvae.

Using these methods, existing wiring diagrams mapped from a reference first instar larva were identified with neurons in a larva augmented with activity information for a neural circuit involved in peristaltic motor control. This demonstrates the feasibility of the contributed methods to associate the wiring diagrams of arbitrary circuits of interest with activity timeseries across multiple individuals, behaviors, and behavioral bouts. To demonstrate capability to augment wiring diagrams with information besides activity, these methods are also applied to multiple larvae each expressing specific neurotransmitter labels rather than calcium indicators in the light sheet microscopy.

This work scaffolds future modeling of circuits underlying behavior that can only be mechanistically understood in the context of multi-modal observation of synaptic connectivity, functional activity and molecular markers. The methods developed also enable comparative connectomics between multiple individuals, which is necessary to study inter-individual variability in circuits and to observe experimental intervention in the development, structure, and function of neural circuits.

Description

Date

2020-11-01

Advisors

Cardona, Albert

Keywords

neuroscience, connectomics, light sheet microscopy, electron microscopy, neural circuits, image processing

Qualification

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Awarding Institution

University of Cambridge
Sponsorship
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia Research Campus