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144


A framework and resource for global collaboration in non-human primate neuroscience

Hartig, Renée; Klink, P Christiaan; Polyakova, Zlata; Dehaqani, Mohammad-Reza A; Bondar, Igor; Merchant, Hugo; Vanduffel, Wim; Roe, Anna Wang; Nambu, Atsushi; Thirumala, M; Shmuel, Amir; Kapoor, Vishal; Gothard, Katalin M; Evrard, Henry C; Basso, Michele A; Petkov, Christopher I; Mitchell, Anna S
As science and technology evolve, there is an increasing need for promotion of international scientific exchange. Collaborations, while offering substantial opportunities for scientists and benefit to society, also present challenges for those working with animal models, such as non-human primates (NHPs). Diversity in regulation of animal research is sometimes mistaken for the absence of common international welfare standards. Here, the ethical and regulatory protocols for 13 countries that have guidelines in place for biomedical research involving NHPs were assessed with a focus on neuroscience. Review of the variability and similarity in trans-national NHP welfare regulations extended to countries in Asia, Europe and North America. A tabulated resource was established to advance solution-oriented discussions and scientific collaborations across borders. Our aim is to better inform the public and other stakeholders. Through cooperative efforts to identify and analyze information with reference to evidence-based discussion, the proposed key ingredients may help to shape and support a more informed, open framework. This framework and resource can be expanded further for biomedical research in other countries.
PMCID:10313859
PMID: 37397811
ISSN: 2665-945x
CID: 5836282

Head-mounted optical imaging and optogenetic stimulation system for use in behaving primates

Zaraza, Derek; Chernov, Mykyta M; Yang, Yiyuan; Rogers, John A; Roe, Anna W; Friedman, Robert M
Advances in optical technology have revolutionized studies of brain function in freely behaving mice. Here, we describe an optical imaging and stimulation device for use in primates that easily attaches to an intracranial chamber. It consists of affordable commercially available or 3D-printed components: a monochromatic camera, a small standard lens, a wireless μLED stimulator powered by an induction coil, and an LED array for illumination. We show that the intrinsic imaging performance of this device is comparable to a standard benchtop system in revealing the functional organization of the visual cortex for awake macaques in a primate chair or under anesthesia. Imaging revealed neural modulatory effects of wireless focal optogenetic stimulation aimed at identified functional domains. With a 1 to 2 cm field of view, 100× larger than previously used in primates without head restraint, our device permits widefield optical imaging and optogenetic stimulation for ethological studies in primates.
PMCID:9795332
PMID: 36590689
ISSN: 2667-2375
CID: 5836352

Large-depth three-photon fluorescence microscopy imaging of cortical microvasculature on nonhuman primates with bright AIE probe In vivo

Zhang, Hequn; Fu, Peng; Liu, Yin; Zheng, Zheng; Zhu, Liang; Wang, Mengqi; Abdellah, Marwan; He, Mubin; Qian, Jun; Roe, Anna Wang; Xi, Wang
Multiphoton microscopy has been a powerful tool in brain research, three-photon fluorescence microscopy is increasingly becoming an emerging technique for neurological research of the cortex in depth. Nonhuman primates play important roles in the study of brain science because of their neural and vascular similarity to humans. However, there are few research results of three-photon fluorescence microscopy on the brain of nonhuman primates due to the lack of optimized imaging systems and excellent fluorescent probes. Here we introduced a bright aggregation-induced emission (AIE) probe with excellent three-photon fluorescence efficiency as well as facile synthesis process and we validated its biocompatibility in the macaque monkey. We achieved a large-depth vascular imaging of approximately 1 mm in the cerebral cortex of macaque monkey with our lab-modified three-photon fluorescence microscopy system and the AIE probe. Functional measurement of blood velocity in deep cortex capillaries was also performed. Furthermore, the comparison of cortical deep vascular structure parameters across species was presented on the monkey and mouse cortex. This work is the first in vivo three-photon fluorescence microscopic imaging research on the macaque monkey cortex reaching the imaging depth of ∼1 mm with the bright AIE probe. The results demonstrate the potential of three-photon microscopy as primate-compatible method for imaging fine vascular networks and will advance our understanding of vascular function in normal and disease in humans.
PMID: 36166895
ISSN: 1878-5905
CID: 5937282

Functionally specific and sparse domain-based micro-networks in monkey V1 and V2

Hu, Jia Ming; Roe, Anna Wang
The cerebral cortices of human and nonhuman primate brains are characterized by submillimeter functional domains. However, little is known about the connections of single functional domains. Here, in macaque monkey visual cortex, we have developed a targeted focal electrical stimulation method, coupled with functional optical imaging, to map cortical networks with submillimeter precision in vivo. We find that single functional domains are a part of highly specific and sparse intra-areal and inter-areal micro-networks. Across color-related and orientation-related functionalities, these micro-networks exhibit parallel connection patterns, suggesting a common domain-based architecture. Moreover, these micro-networks shift topographically at a submillimeter scale, suggesting that they serve as a fundamental unit for cortical information processing. Our findings establish a domain-based connectional architecture in the primate brain and present new constraints for cortical map representation.
PMID: 35623347
ISSN: 1879-0445
CID: 5836342

Toward next-generation primate neuroscience: A collaboration-based strategic plan for integrative neuroimaging

Milham, Michael; Petkov, Chris; Belin, Pascal; Ben Hamed, Suliann; Evrard, Henry; Fair, Damien; Fox, Andrew; Froudist-Walsh, Sean; Hayashi, Takuya; Kastner, Sabine; Klink, Chris; Majka, Piotr; Mars, Rogier; Messinger, Adam; Poirier, Colline; Schroeder, Charles; Shmuel, Amir; Silva, Afonso C; Vanduffel, Wim; Van Essen, David C; Wang, Zheng; Roe, Anna Wang; Wilke, Melanie; Xu, Ting; Aarabi, Mohammad Hadi; Adolphs, Ralph; Ahuja, Aarit; Alvand, Ashkan; Amiez, Celine; Autio, Joonas; Azadi, Reza; Baeg, Eunha; Bai, Ruiliang; Bao, Pinglei; Basso, Michele; Behel, Austin K; Bennett, Yvonne; Bernhardt, Boris; Biswal, Bharat; Boopathy, Sethu; Boretius, Susann; Borra, Elena; Boshra, Rober; Buffalo, Elizabeth; Cao, Long; Cavanaugh, James; Celine, Amiez; Chavez, Gianfranco; Chen, Li Min; Chen, Xiaodong; Cheng, Luqi; Chouinard-Decorte, Francois; Clavagnier, Simon; Cléry, Justine; Colcombe, Stan J; Conway, Bevil; Cordeau, Melina; Coulon, Olivier; Cui, Yue; Dadarwal, Rakshit; Dahnke, Robert; Desrochers, Theresa; Deying, Li; Dougherty, Kacie; Doyle, Hannah; Drzewiecki, Carly M; Duyck, Marianne; Arachchi, Wasana Ediri; Elorette, Catherine; Essamlali, Abdelhadi; Evans, Alan; Fajardo, Alfonso; Figueroa, Hector; Franco, Alexandre; Freches, Guilherme; Frey, Steve; Friedrich, Patrick; Fujimoto, Atsushi; Fukunaga, Masaki; Gacoin, Maeva; Gallardo, Guillermo; Gao, Lixia; Gao, Yang; Garside, Danny; Garza-Villarreal, Eduardo A; Gaudet-Trafit, Maxime; Gerbella, Marzio; Giavasis, Steven; Glen, Daniel; Ribeiro Gomes, Ana Rita; Torrecilla, Sandra Gonzalez; Gozzi, Alessandro; Gulli, Roberto; Haber, Suzanne; Hadj-Bouziane, Fadila; Fujimoto, Satoka Hashimoto; Hawrylycz, Michael; He, Quansheng; He, Ye; Heuer, Katja; Hiba, Bassem; Hoffstaedter, Felix; Hong, Seok-Jun; Hori, Yuki; Hou, Yujie; Howard, Amy; de la Iglesia-Vaya, Maria; Ikeda, Takuro; Jankovic-Rapan, Lucija; Jaramillo, Jorge; Jedema, Hank P; Jin, Hecheng; Jiang, Minqing; Jung, Benjamin; Kagan, Igor; Kahn, Itamar; Kiar, Gregory; Kikuchi, Yuki; Kilavik, Bjørg; Kimura, Nobuyuki; Klatzmann, Ulysse; Kwok, Sze Chai; Lai, Hsin-Yi; Lamberton, Franck; Lehman, Julia; Li, Pengcheng; Li, Xinhui; Li, Xinjian; Liang, Zhifeng; Liston, Conor; Little, Roger; Liu, Cirong; Liu, Ning; Liu, Xiaojin; Liu, Xinyu; Lu, Haidong; Loh, Kep Kee; Madan, Christopher; Magrou, Loïc; Margulies, Daniel; Mathilda, Froesel; Mejia, Sheyla; Meng, Yao; Menon, Ravi; Meunier, David; Mitchell, A J; Mitchell, Anna; Murphy, Aidan; Mvula, Towela; Ortiz-Rios, Michael; Ortuzar Martinez, Diego Emanuel; Pagani, Marco; Palomero-Gallagher, Nicola; Pareek, Vikas; Perkins, Pierce; Ponce, Fernanda; Postans, Mark; Pouget, Pierre; Qian, Meizhen; Ramirez, Julian Bene; Raven, Erika; Restrepo, Isabel; Rima, Samy; Rockland, Kathleen; Rodriguez, Nadira Yusif; Roger, Elise; Hortelano, Eduardo Rojas; Rosa, Marcello; Rossi, Andrew; Rudebeck, Peter; Russ, Brian; Sakai, Tomoko; Saleem, Kadharbatcha S; Sallet, Jerome; Sawiak, Stephen; Schaeffer, David; Schwiedrzik, Caspar M; Seidlitz, Jakob; Sein, Julien; Sharma, Jitendra; Shen, Kelly; Sheng, Wei-An; Shi, Neo Sunhang; Shim, Won Mok; Simone, Luciano; Sirmpilatze, Nikoloz; Sivan, Virginie; Song, Xiaowei; Tanenbaum, Aaron; Tasserie, Jordy; Taylor, Paul; Tian, Xiaoguang; Toro, Roberto; Trambaiolli, Lucas; Upright, Nick; Vezoli, Julien; Vickery, Sam; Villalon, Julio; Wang, Xiaojie; Wang, Yufan; Weiss, Alison R; Wilson, Charlie; Wong, Ting-Yat; Woo, Choong-Wan; Wu, Bichan; Xiao, Du; Xu, Augix Guohua; Xu, Dongrong; Xufeng, Zhou; Yacoub, Essa; Ye, Ningrong; Ying, Zhang; Yokoyama, Chihiro; Yu, Xiongjie; Yue, Shasha; Yuheng, Lu; Yumeng, Xin; Zaldivar, Daniel; Zhang, Shaomin; Zhao, Yuguang; Zuo, Zhanguang
Open science initiatives are creating opportunities to increase research coordination and impact in nonhuman primate (NHP) imaging. The PRIMatE Data and Resource Exchange community recently developed a collaboration-based strategic plan to advance NHP imaging as an integrative approach for multiscale neuroscience.
PMID: 34731649
ISSN: 1097-4199
CID: 5499342

Representation of Cone-Opponent Color Space in Macaque Early Visual Cortices

Du, Xiao; Jiang, Xinrui; Kuriki, Ichiro; Takahata, Toru; Zhou, Tao; Roe, Anna Wang; Tanigawa, Hisashi
In primate vision, the encoding of color perception arises from three types of retinal cone cells (L, M, and S cones). The inputs from these cones are linearly integrated into two cone-opponent channels (cardinal axes) before the lateral geniculate nucleus. In subsequent visual cortical stages, color-preferring neurons cluster into functional domains within "blobs" in V1, "thin/color stripes" in V2, and "color bands" in V4. Here, we hypothesize that, with increasing cortical hierarchy, the functional organization of hue representation becomes more balanced and less dependent on cone opponency. To address this question, we used intrinsic signal optical imaging in macaque V1, V2, and V4 cortices to examine the domain-based representation of specific hues (here referred to as "hue domains") in cone-opponent color space (4 cardinal and 4 intermediate hues). Interestingly, we found that in V1, the relative size of S-cone hue preference domain was significantly smaller than that for other hues. This notable difference was less prominent in V2, and, in V4 was virtually absent, resulting in a more balanced representation of hues. In V2, hue clusters contained sequences of shifting preference, while in V4 the organization of hue clusters was more complex. Pattern classification analysis of these hue maps showed that accuracy of hue classification improved from V1 to V2 to V4. These results suggest that hue representation by domains in the early cortical hierarchy reflects a transformation away from cone-opponency and toward a full-coverage representation of hue.
PMCID:9251113
PMID: 35794953
ISSN: 1662-4548
CID: 5937272

CELL REPORTS METHODS

Zaraza, Derek; Chernov, Mykyta M.; Yang, Yiyuan; Rogers, John A.; Roe, Anna W.; Friedman, Robert M.
ISI:000908277700003
ISSN: 2667-2375
CID: 5836112

FRONTIERS IN NEUROANATOMY

Mir, Yaqub; Zalanyi, Laszlo; Palfi, Emese; Ashaber, Maria; Roe, Anna W.; Friedman, Robert M.; Negyessy, Laszlo
ISI:000830177100001
ISSN: 1662-5129
CID: 5836262

Modular Organization of Signal Transmission in Primate Somatosensory Cortex

Mir, Yaqub; Zalányi, László; Pálfi, Emese; Ashaber, Mária; Roe, Anna W; Friedman, Robert M; Négyessy, László
Axonal patches are known as the major sites of synaptic connections in the cerebral cortex of higher order mammals. However, the functional role of these patches is highly debated. Patches are formed by populations of nearby neurons in a topographic manner and are recognized as the termination fields of long-distance lateral connections within and between cortical areas. In addition, axons form numerous boutons that lie outside the patches, whose function is also unknown. To better understand the functional roles of these two distinct populations of boutons, we compared individual and collective morphological features of axons within and outside the patches of intra-areal, feedforward, and feedback pathways by way of tract tracing in the somatosensory cortex of New World monkeys. We found that, with the exception of tortuosity, which is an invariant property, bouton spacing and axonal convergence properties differ significantly between axons within patch and no-patch domains. Principal component analyses corroborated the clustering of axons according to patch formation without any additional effect by the type of pathway or laminar distribution. Stepwise logistic regression identified convergence and bouton density as the best predictors of patch formation. These findings support that patches are specific sites of axonal convergence that promote the synchronous activity of neuronal populations. On the other hand, no-patch domains could form a neuroanatomical substrate to diversify the responses of cortical neurons.
PMCID:9305200
PMID: 35873660
ISSN: 1662-5129
CID: 5836362

Large-depth three-photon fluorescence microscopy imaging of cortical microvasculature on nonhuman primates with bright ATE probe In vivo

Zhang, Hequn; Fu, Peng; Liu, Yin; Zheng, Zheng; Zhu, Liang; Wang, Mengqi; Abdellah, Marwan; He, Mubin; Qian, Jun; Roe, Anna Wang; Xi, Wang
ISI:000863454600002
ISSN: 0142-9612
CID: 5836392