Tilt in Place Microscopy: a Simple, Low-Cost Solution to Image Neural Responses to Body Rotations

Author:

Hamling Kyla R.,Zhu Yunlu,Auer Franziska,Schoppik DavidORCID

Abstract

Animals use information about gravity and other destabilizing forces to balance and navigate through their environment. Measuring how brains respond to these forces requires considerable technical knowledge and/or financial resources. We present a simple alternative—Tilt In Place Microscopy (TIPM), a low-cost and noninvasive way to measure neural activity following rapid changes in body orientation. Here, we used TIPM to study vestibulospinal neurons in larval zebrafish during and immediately after roll tilts. Vestibulospinal neurons responded with reliable increases in activity that varied as a function of ipsilateral tilt amplitude. TIPM differentiated tonic (i.e., sustained tilt) from phasic responses, revealing coarse topography of stimulus sensitivity in the lateral vestibular nucleus. Neuronal variability across repeated sessions was minor relative to trial-to-trial variability, allowing us to use TIPM for longitudinal studies of the same neurons across two developmental time points. There, we observed global increases in response strength and systematic changes in the neural representation of stimulus direction. Our data extend classical characterization of the body tilt representation by vestibulospinal neurons and establish the utility of TIPM to study the neural basis of balance, especially in developing animals.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTVestibular sensation influences everything from navigation to interoception. Here, we detail a straightforward, validated, and nearly universal approach to image how the nervous system senses and responds to body tilts. We use our new method to replicate and expand on past findings of tilt sensing by a conserved population of spinal-projecting vestibular neurons. The simplicity and broad compatibility of our approach will democratize the study of the response of the brain to destabilization, particularly across development.

Funder

Brain Research Foundation

Dana Foundation

Leon Levy Foundation

HHS | NIH | National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Irma T. Hirschl/Monique Weill-Caulier Trust

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Neuroscience

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