The annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience is a humbling experience. The electrifying hum of high-minded neuro-speak echoes among the attendees – over 30,000 strong.
This year was exciting from numerous perspectives. A resounding topic of discussion this year included new imaging technologies and the insight these may provide into complex brain processes.
Zeiss showcased several key developments and collaborations in the areas of multi-aspect imaging and data analysis. With a broad portfolio of instruments, Zeiss aims to empower investigations across all scales – from the submicron to the hundred-micron range and beyond. Critical to this vision are the levels of integration required in order to piece imaging techniques together to form larger, more comprehensive pictures of the brain and associated neural processes.
Zeiss ZEN Connect is an enhanced imaging software platform designed for advanced visual analysis. Built to ensure users focus on the data rather than the acquisition method, ZEN Connect enables workflows initiated on any microscope, throughout multiple ranges of magnification, to be automatically overlaid and relocated using mapping algorithms. The technology supports data analysis in a wider context, connecting large field of view images with high resolution details.
Also announced at the Zeiss press conference was an interesting collaboration with Inscopix, a company focused on mesoscale imaging and brain mapping technologies. Inscopix has pioneered miniature head-mountable microscope technology which allows imaging of large-scale brain circuit dynamics -- in live animals and in real time. These “portable” microscopes are connected to controllers which can modulate activities such as calcium signalling in discrete areas of the brain during natural behavior.
Coupled with the Zeiss LSM800 and Airyscan platforms, the system targets image resolution enhancement of brain circuit activity for research and drug development.
Olympus showcased a range of microscope platforms and imaging software solutions, including several recent product releases.
NoviSight cell analysis software is designed to provide statistical data for complex samples, spheroids, and other 3D objects in microplate-based experiments. The technology allows users to check the morphology of samples by measuring a range of spheroid or cell nuclei parameters. The software makes it possible to measure and analyze physiological 3D models, helping improve the speed of HCS processes and drug discovery.
Combining the themes of enhanced image resolution with 3D sample analysis, Life Canvas Technologies brings an innovative perspective to whole organ visualization through their suite of imaging solutions. The company’s technology portfolio includes three platforms designed to enhance and enable visualization of 3D structures and molecular phenotyping in the brain.
This latter method forms the basis of the SmartLabel instrument platform, which enables complete clearing of model organs within 1-3 days and staining with nuclear dyes, proteins, and antibodies in a 1-day period.
The SmartSPIM instrument platform is an advanced light sheet microscope capable of imaging large tissue samples with high speed and resolution. The unique illumination arm of the instrument creates a flat-top illumination profile laterally, and a focused beam axially. The illumination optics scan the beam axially while synchronized with the imaging camera.
Perhaps the most interesting aspect is the high-speed volumetric imaging capabilities, allowing image capture of a mouse brain hemisphere in less than 15 minutes or a whole mouse brain in less than 25 minutes at 1.53 µm x 1.75 µm x 4 µm voxel size.
These are a mere few of the advancements offering insight into brain imaging, brain mapping, and neural circuitry visualization. The broad spectrum of powerful new technologies on display this year offers promise towards a greater understanding of the world’s most complex biological system.