Automated task training and longitudinal monitoring of mouse mesoscale cortical circuits using home cages

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Abstract

We report improved automated open-source methodology for head-fixed mesoscale cortical imaging and/or behavioral training of home cage mice using Raspberry Pi-based hardware. Staged partial and probabilistic restraint allows mice to adjust to self-initiated headfixation over 3 weeks’ time with ~50% participation rate. We support a cue-based behavioral licking task monitored by a capacitive touch-sensor water spout. While automatically head-fixed, we acquire spontaneous, movement-triggered, or licking task-evoked GCaMP6 cortical signals. An analysis pipeline marked both behavioral events, as well as analyzed brain fluorescence signals as they relate to spontaneous and/or task-evoked behavioral activity. Mice were trained to suppress licking and wait for cues that marked the delivery of water. Correct rewarded go-trials were associated with widespread activation of midline and lateral barrel cortex areas following a vibration cue and delayed frontal and lateral motor cortex activation. Cortical GCaMP signals predicted trial success and correlated strongly with trial-outcome dependent body movements.

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Murphy, T. H., Michelson, N. J., Boyd, J. D., Fong, T., Bolaños, L. A., Bierbrauer, D., … Ledue, J. M. (2020). Automated task training and longitudinal monitoring of mouse mesoscale cortical circuits using home cages. ELife, 9, 1–91. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.55964

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