Van der Linden Annemie, Van Meir Vincent, Tindemans Ilse, Verhoye Marleen, Balthazart Jacques
Bio-Imaging Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Antwerp, Campus Middelheim, Groenenborgerlaan 171, 2020 Antwerp, Belgium.
NMR Biomed. 2004 Dec;17(8):602-12. doi: 10.1002/nbm.936.
The song control system of song birds is an excellent model for studying brain plasticity and has thus far been extensively analyzed by histological and electrophysiological methods. However, these approaches do not provide a global view of the brain and/or do not allow repeated measures, which are necessary to establish correlations between alterations in neural substrate and behavior. Application of in vivo manganese-enhanced MRI enabled us for the first time to visualize the song control system repeatedly in the same bird, making it possible to quantify dynamically the volume changes in this circuit as a function of seasonal and hormonal influences. In this review, we introduce and explore the song control system of song birds as a natural model for brain plasticity to validate a new cutting edge technique, which we called 'repeated dynamic manganese enhanced MRI' or D-MEMRI. This technique is based on the use of implanted permanent cannulae--for accurate repeated manganese injections in a defined target area--and the subsequent MRI acquisition of the dynamics of the accumulation of manganese in projection brain targets. A compilation of the D-MEMRI data obtained thus far in this system demonstrates the usefulness of this new method for studying brain plasticity. In particular it is shown to be a perfect tool for long-term studies of morphological and functional responses of specific brain circuits to changes in endocrine conditions. The method was also successfully applied to obtain quantitative measures of changes in activity as a function of auditory stimuli in different neuronal populations of a same nucleus that project to different targets. D-MEMRI, combined with other MRI techniques, clearly harbors potential for unraveling seasonal, hormonal, pharmacological or even genetically driven changes in a neuronal circuit, by simultaneously measuring changes in morphology, activity and connectivity.
鸣禽的歌声控制系统是研究大脑可塑性的一个优秀模型,迄今为止已经通过组织学和电生理方法进行了广泛分析。然而,这些方法无法提供大脑的整体视图,和/或不允许进行重复测量,而这对于建立神经基质变化与行为之间的相关性是必要的。体内锰增强磁共振成像(MRI)的应用使我们首次能够在同一只鸟身上反复可视化歌声控制系统,从而有可能动态量化该回路中随季节和激素影响而发生的体积变化。在这篇综述中,我们将鸣禽的歌声控制系统作为大脑可塑性的自然模型进行介绍和探讨,以验证一种新的前沿技术,我们称之为“重复动态锰增强MRI”或D-MEMRI。该技术基于植入永久性套管——以便在定义的目标区域进行精确的重复锰注射——以及随后对锰在投射脑目标中积累动态的MRI采集。到目前为止在该系统中获得的D-MEMRI数据汇编证明了这种新方法在研究大脑可塑性方面的有用性。特别是,它被证明是研究特定脑回路对内分泌条件变化的形态和功能反应的长期研究的完美工具。该方法还成功应用于获得同一核中投射到不同目标的不同神经元群体中作为听觉刺激函数的活动变化的定量测量。D-MEMRI与其他MRI技术相结合,通过同时测量形态、活动和连接性的变化,显然具有揭示神经元回路中季节性、激素、药理学甚至基因驱动变化的潜力。