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Development of a Functional Connectivity Optical Imaging Protocol and Analysis Pipeline for Mouse Models of Autism Spectrum Disorder
Objectives: This study aims to develop functional connectivity optical imaging methods in mouse models of autism and to apply it to pilot groups of genetic or environmental mouse models of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
Methods: Functional connectivity OIS imaging was performed on two cohorts of mice with autism-related behavioral phenotypes, an SSRI exposure model and a Celf6 knockout model. In each pilot group, ASD model mice were compared to age-matched wildtype controls by imaging the cerebral cortex of the anesthetized mouse at adulthood, measuring changes in reflected light intensity to calculate relative changes in hemoglobin concentrations. Resting-state functional connectivity and left forepaw stimulation data were collected across multiple runs for each mouse and averaged to produce maps of functional connectivity and variation.
Results: Contralateral homotopic connectivity varied across cortical regions at rest and cortical activation in response to forepaw stimulation varied between mice. A similarity analysis evaluated how similar (spatially) the functional connectivity patterns of the ASD mice were to a control group. No consistent pattern of dissimilarity was found in the ASD groups of mice when measured at adulthood, but a common region of high variability was identified in the individuals of both the ASD groups and controls.
Conclusions: Functional connectivity OIS imaging is a minimally invasive optical imaging method that can be used to map functional connectivity in mouse models of autism. Mapping functional connectivity with these methods in mouse models of autism can control for genetic and environmental differences which may influence imaging research results in humans.
See more of: Brain Function (fMRI, fcMRI, MRS, EEG, ERP, MEG)