ePoster

Distinct and asymmetric responses to pitch-tilt axis and roll-tilt axis vestibular stimulation in larval zebrafish

Geoffrey Migaultand 4 co-authors
FENS Forum 2024 (2024)
Messe Wien Exhibition & Congress Center, Vienna, Austria

Presentation

Date TBA

Poster preview

Distinct and asymmetric responses to pitch-tilt axis and roll-tilt axis vestibular stimulation in larval zebrafish poster preview

Event Information

Abstract

Posture is crucial to executing motor functions and its perturbation leads to various strategies to regain preferred postures. The vestibular system plays a vital role in responding to movement-related cues to maintain preferred directions. Previous work has introduced a miniaturised, rotating, light-sheet microscope for brain-wide neuronal recordings during controlled vestibular stimulation in head-restrained zebrafish larvae to study whole-brain circuits. In this study, we present significant enhancements to such a setup to enable precise rotational movements along arbitrary axes between roll-tilt and pitch-tilt (nose moving up and down) directions. The improved design is 3D printable and incorporates a double galvanometer mirror configuration, facilitating replication and enhancing scanning capabilities. Using this design, we conducted the first mapping of larval zebrafish brain-wide responses to dynamic vestibular stimulation along the pitch-tilt axis, a dimension of vestibular processing that is important for movement initiation but hasn't been explored with whole-brain imaging. Our findings revealed an asymmetry in the number of responsive neurons between nose-up and nose-down tilt responses, displaying distinct spatial patterns. Furthermore, we conducted recordings during roll-tilt stimuli in the same fish, revealing a greater number of responsive neurons across the brain, especially in the cerebellum, during roll stimuli, compared to pitch. Also, we identified a transgenic line that exhibited significant overlap with these functional maps, offering exciting opportunities for further investigation using fluorescence-mediated tracing, optogenetics, or targeted ablation studies. These results reveal how whole-brain circuits respond to vestibular stimuli by recruiting distinct and asymmetric neuronal populations based on the axis of the stimulus.

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