Sakurai Yuma, Ikeda Yuzuru
Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Engineering and Science, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan.
Faculty of Science, Department of Chemistry, Biology, and Marine Science, University of the Ryukyus, Okinawa, Japan.
Microsc Res Tech. 2019 Nov;82(11):1941-1952. doi: 10.1002/jemt.23363. Epub 2019 Aug 14.
Coleoid cephalopods (squid, cuttlefish, and octopus) have a well-developed and complex central nervous system. Its absolute size is the largest among invertebrates, and the brain-to-body mass ratio is larger than that of fish and reptiles and equivalent to that of birds and mammals. Although a number of histological studies have been conducted on the brains of cephalopods, most of them used a light microscope or an electron microscope, which show the microstructure of the brain, but often cannot image the whole brain instantaneously. Of late, micro computed tomography (CT) has gained popularity for imaging animal brains because it allows for noninvasive three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction and preprocessing that are not cumbersome. To perform micro-CT on cephalopod brains, we first tested conditions suitable for preprocessing, paying special attention to staining conditions that would provide high contrast images. Four agents, iodine in 99.5% ethanol, iodine potassium iodide in water (IKI), phosphotungstic acid in 70% ethanol, and nonionic iodinated contrast agent in water, were tested at various concentrations and durations on brain of juvenile oval squid. To evaluate the quality of staining, we calculated the contrast ratio of the two-dimensional (2D) images and compared 3D segmentation of the best and worst 2D images. We concluded that 3% IKI staining for 7 days was the best combination to enhance the images contrast of the oval squid brain, in which each brain lobe was clearly detected and 3D segmentation of the whole brain was possible. The wider applicability of this preprocessing method for micro-CT of the brains of other cephalopods is discussed.
头足纲软体动物(鱿鱼、乌贼和章鱼)拥有发达且复杂的中枢神经系统。其绝对大小在无脊椎动物中是最大的,脑与身体质量比大于鱼类和爬行动物,与鸟类和哺乳动物相当。尽管对头足纲动物的大脑已经进行了大量组织学研究,但其中大多数使用的是光学显微镜或电子显微镜,这些显微镜可以显示大脑的微观结构,但通常无法即时成像整个大脑。最近,微计算机断层扫描(CT)在动物大脑成像方面受到了广泛欢迎,因为它允许进行无创三维(3D)重建和预处理,且并不繁琐。为了对头足纲动物的大脑进行微CT扫描,我们首先测试了适合预处理的条件,特别关注能够提供高对比度图像的染色条件。我们在不同浓度和时长下,对四种试剂——99.5%乙醇中的碘、水中的碘化钾碘(IKI)、70%乙醇中的磷钨酸以及水中的非离子碘化造影剂——在幼年椭圆形鱿鱼的大脑上进行了测试。为了评估染色质量,我们计算了二维(2D)图像的对比度,并比较了最佳和最差2D图像的3D分割情况。我们得出结论,3%的IKI染色7天是增强椭圆形鱿鱼大脑图像对比度的最佳组合,在这种情况下,每个脑叶都能被清晰检测到,并且可以对整个大脑进行3D分割。本文还讨论了这种预处理方法在其他头足纲动物大脑微CT扫描中的更广泛适用性。