DYE-INDUCED PHOTOPERMEABILIZATION AND PHOTODEGENERATION - A LESION TECHNIQUE USEFUL FOR NEURONAL TRACING

被引:14
作者
PICAUD, S [1 ]
WUNDERER, H [1 ]
FRANCESCHINI, N [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV REGENSBURG, INST ZOOL, W-8400 REGENSBURG, GERMANY
关键词
Dye; Invertebrate nervous system; Lesion; Neuronal degeneration; Neuronal tracing; Permeabilization; Photosensitization; Retina;
D O I
10.1016/0165-0270(90)90014-7
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Using as a neural system the fly retina, which is visually accessible in vivo, we describe a lesion technique that takes advantage of the photodynamic damage produced by extrinsic dyes. Contrary to the photo-inactivation technique described by Miller and Selverston (1979), this technique does not involve intracellular injection, since the dye is applied to the extracellular space of the tissue. This treatment was found to trigger neuronal degeneration and cell permeabilization in fly photoreceptor neurones. We coined the names 'photodegeneration' and 'photopermeabilization' for these two phenomena. While the technique can be used to delete given neurones from the neural circuit after several days' survival time, it was found to produce adequate cytoplasmic labelling for anatomical studies with both light and electron microscopy. Since the area occupied by the degenerating cells is restricted to the light spot imaged onto the nervous tissue, the resolution with this lesion technique can range from single cells to whole neuronal populations. The remarkable precision of the 'photolesions' produced in this way makes this technique a powerful tool for physiological and anatomical investigations on real neural networks, whenever these can be made optically accessible in vivo or in situ. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 112
页数:12
相关论文
共 42 条
[11]  
Heimer, 1970, CONTEMPORARY RESEARC, P162
[12]   ACCURACY OF PATTERNS OF CONNEXIONS OF FIRST-ORDER AND SECOND-ORDER NEURONS OF VISUAL SYSTEM OF CALLIPHORA [J].
HORRIDGE, GA ;
MEINERTZHAGEN, IA .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1970, 175 (1038) :69-+
[13]  
JONSSON G, 1981, TECHNIQUES NEUROANAT, P71
[14]   FLUORESCENT LATEX MICROSPHERES AS A RETROGRADE NEURONAL MARKER FOR INVIVO AND INVITRO STUDIES OF VISUAL-CORTEX [J].
KATZ, LC ;
BURKHALTER, A ;
DREYER, WJ .
NATURE, 1984, 310 (5977) :498-500
[15]  
KIRSCHFELD K, 1967, EXP BRAIN RES, V3, P248
[16]   CAROTENOID-PIGMENTS - THEIR POSSIBLE ROLE IN PROTECTING AGAINST PHOTO-OXIDATION IN EYES AND PHOTORECEPTOR CELLS [J].
KIRSCHFELD, K .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1982, 216 (1202) :71-85
[17]   EVIDENCE FOR A SENSITIZING PIGMENT IN FLY PHOTORECEPTORS [J].
KIRSCHFELD, K ;
FRANCESCHINI, N ;
MINKE, B .
NATURE, 1977, 269 (5627) :386-390
[18]   PHOTO-STABLE PIGMENT WITHIN RHABDOMERE OF FLY PHOTORECEPTORS NO 7 [J].
KIRSCHFELD, K ;
FEILER, R ;
FRANCESCHINI, N .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY, 1978, 125 (03) :275-284
[19]   RAPID KILLING OF SINGLE NEURONS BY IRRADIATION OF INTRACELLULARLY INJECTED DYE [J].
MILLER, JP ;
SELVERSTON, AI .
SCIENCE, 1979, 206 (4419) :702-704
[20]  
MUGNAINI E, 1981, NEUROANATOMICAL TRAC, P377