Relationship between simultaneously recorded spiking activity and fluorescence signal in GCaMP6 transgenic mice

Lawrence Huang(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Peter Ledochowitsch(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Ulf Knoblich(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Jérôme Lecoq(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Gabe J. Murphy(Allen Institute for Brain Science), R. Clay Reid(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Saskia de Vries(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Christof Koch(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Hongkui Zeng(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Michael A. Buice(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Jack Waters(Allen Institute for Brain Science), Lu Li(Allen Institute for Brain Science)
eLife
March 8, 2021
Cited by 174Open Access
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Abstract

Fluorescent calcium indicators are often used to investigate neural dynamics, but the relationship between fluorescence and action potentials (APs) remains unclear. Most APs can be detected when the soma almost fills the microscope's field of view, but calcium indicators are used to image populations of neurons, necessitating a large field of view, generating fewer photons per neuron, and compromising AP detection. Here, we characterized the AP-fluorescence transfer function in vivo for 48 layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons in primary visual cortex, with simultaneous calcium imaging and cell-attached recordings from transgenic mice expressing GCaMP6s or GCaMP6f. While most APs were detected under optimal conditions, under conditions typical of population imaging studies, only a minority of 1 AP and 2 AP events were detected (often <10% and ~20-30%, respectively), emphasizing the limits of AP detection under more realistic imaging conditions.


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