BRAIN CONNECTS
BRAIN CONNECTS: Rapid and Cost‐effective Connectomics with Intelligent Image Acquisition, Reconstruction, and Querying
SUMMARY High-throughput connectomics is needed to generate the TB-, PB- and EB-scale wiring diagrams of mammalian brains, but is limited to the few research institutes (e.g., Janelia, Allen, Max Planck) with sufficient infrastructure. As resource-rich as these institutes are, none are able to do a whole brain at nanometer scale on their own. The failure to broaden participation to a larger community is an obstacle to scaling connectomics. We propose a new and more affordable imaging strategy that will allow many more teams to engage in connectomics.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Mapping brain-wide connectivity of neuronal types using barcoded connectomics
Project Summary Mapping the brain-wide connections of neurons provides a foundation for understanding the structure and functions of a brain. Neuroanatomical techniques based on light-microscopy or electron microscopy have advanced tremendously in throughput and cost in recent years, but it remains challenging to scale them up to systematically interrogate large non-human primate (NHP) brains.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Comprehensive regional projection map of marmoset with single axon and cell type resolution
SUMMARY This ambitious proposal will establish an integrated experimental-computational platform to create the first comprehensive brain-wide mesoscale connectivity map in a non-human primate, the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus),. It will do so by tracing axonal projections of RNA barcode-identified neurons brain-wide in the marmoset, utilizing a sequencing-based imaging method that also permits simultaneous transcriptomic cell typing of the identified neurons.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Center for Mesoscale Connectomics
PROJECT SUMMARY To understand complex neural pathways and networks and their remarkable ability to generate human behaviors, it is critical to precisely map brain connectomics in vivo. We propose to make significant advances in such brain mapping by founding the Center for Mesoscale Connectomics (CMC). We will first map the mesoscale connections between the frontal and parietal cortices. These connections likely subserve higher-order functions such as attention, decision-making, prospection, and executive control.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Mapping Connectivity of the Human Brainstem in a Nuclear Coordinate System
Project Summary/Abstract (30 lines of text limit) The ~1 billion neurons that form the human brainstem are organized at multiple scales, ranging from their cell type-specific patterns of dendritic arborization, to local circuits embedded within large-scale projection systems spanning the brainstem, and a complex nuclear architecture.
BRAIN CONNECTS: A Center for High-throughput Integrative Mouse Connectomics
Project Summary/Abstract The proposed project will demonstrate the feasibility of generating a complete synapse-level brain map (connectome) by developing a serial-section electron microscopy pipeline that could scale to a whole mouse brain. This work will image 10 cubic millimeters, itself an unprecedentedly large dataset that may exceed tens of petabytes. Yet the mouse brain is 50 times larger. Reaching this ambitious goal will require advances in whole-brain staining, imaging, image-processing, analysis, and dissemination tools.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Center for a pipeline of high throughput integrated volumetric electron microscopy for whole mouse brain connectomics
Project Summary: Center for whole mouse brain connectomics using high-throughput integrated volumetric electron microscopy (HIVE) Two fundamental components of the structural basis of brain function are cell type composition and the wiring diagram between those cells. Over the past decade there has been paradigm-shifting progress in understanding cell type composition of the brain. Now it’s time to systematically uncover the brain’s wiring diagram and place it into the context of cell types. Knowledge about the complete connectomes in C.
BRAIN CONNECTS: PatchLink, scalable tools for integrating connectomes, projectomes, and transcriptomes
Project Summary / Abstract Upcoming brain-wide descriptions of synaptic connectivity are poised to transform our understanding of brain circuitry in the same way single-cell genomics has revolutionized our understanding of cell type diversity. The challenge of relating whole-brain wiring diagrams to cell-type genetic properties must be overcome in order to fully realize the potential of these datasets.
BRAIN CONNECTS: Multi-beam transmission electron microscopy of iteratively milled semi-thick tissue sections
Project Summary/Abstract Volume electron microscopy is the only technique to-date that provides both sufficient resolution (100 μm) for the dense reconstruction of neuronal wiring diagrams. Currently, there exist two systems that have already delivered mm3-sized synaptic resolution electron microscopy stacks: Multi-beam scanning electron microscopy(Eberle et al. 2015; Ren and Kruit 2016) (mSEM) and Gridtape-based automated transmission electron microscopy(Yin et al. 2020; Maniates-Selvin et al. 2020) (Gridtape-TEM).