Back to Search Start Over

Neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging of mouse brain microstructure

Authors :
Jieying Zhang
Leonard E. White
G. Allan Johnson
Robert J. Anderson
Yi Qi
Gary P. Cofer
Nian Wang
Source :
Brain Struct Funct
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Advanced biophysical models like neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) have been developed to estimate the microstructural complexity of voxels enriched in dendrites and axons for both in vivo and ex vivo studies. NODDI metrics derived from high spatial and angular resolution diffusion MRI using the fixed mouse brain as a reference template have not yet been reported due in part to the extremely long scan time required. In this study, we modified the three-dimensional diffusion-weighted spin-echo pulse sequence for multi-shell and undersampling acquisition to reduce the scan time. This allowed us to acquire several exhaustive datasets that would otherwise not be attainable. NODDI metrics were derived from a complex eight shell diffusion (1000 – 8000 s/mm(2)) dataset with 384 diffusion gradient encoding directions at 50 μm isotropic resolution. These provided a foundation for exploration of tradeoffs among acquisition parameters. A three-shell acquisition strategy covering low, medium, and high b values with at least angular resolution of 64 is essential for ex vivo NODDI experiments. The good agreement between neurite density index (NDI) and the orientation dispersion index (ODI) with the subsequent histochemical analysis of myelin and neuronal density highlights that NODDI could provide new insight into the microstructure of the brain. Furthermore, we found that NDI is sensitive to microstructural variations in the corpus callosum using a well-established demyelination cuprizone model. The study lays the ground work for developing protocols for routine use of high resolution NODDI method in characterizing brain microstructure in mouse models.

Details

ISSN :
18632661 and 18632653
Volume :
224
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Structure and Function
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56bb0f23a73ff00fe3cde19886d2f983
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00429-019-01877-x