Art in Neuroscience 2021

Images from Cellular Imaging’s inaugural image and video competition showcasing some of the wonderful images produced by ZI staff, students, and affiliates.

 Scientific Award | 1st Place

Salamander Senses

Eliza Jaeger | Tosches Lab
Staining performed with help from Alonso Ortega Gurrola
Funding: NSF GRFP

This is an image of an entire, cleared, larval salamander (Pleurodeles waltl) head with its brain and skin shown in white and developing sensory projections along its arms, skin, and gills shown in red.


 Scientific Award | 2nd Place

BirdBow

Marissa Applegate, with help from Konstantin Gutnichenko | Aronov Lab
Funding: Beckman Young Investigators Award

Discovery of a possible entorhinal cortex analog in black-capped chickadees, revealed through anatomical tracing. Differently colored cells send input to different portions of the chickadee hippocampus.


Creative Award | 1st Place

Spinal Inflorescence

Anders Nelson | Costa Lab
Funding: 1K99NS118053-01

Spinal interneurons expressing calbindin (purple) surrounded by excitatory synapses (pink).


Creative Award | 2nd Place

The perineuronal net extracellular matrix of the hippocampal CA2 subfield

Alex Whitebirch | Siegelbaum Lab
Funding: 1F31NS113466-01

The perineuronal net is a specialized extracellular matrix that typically ensheathes parvalbumin-expressing interneurons. However, in the CA2 subfield of the hippocampus this matrix is also found surrounding excitatory pyramidal neurons, where it has an important role regulating synaptic plasticity.


Peoples Choice Award

The sticky glue of our brain

Eugenie PEZE-HEIDSIECK (she/her) and Carlos DIAZ SALAZAR ALBELDA (he/him) | Polleux Lab
Funding: NOMIS and Fyssen Foundation

Glia comes from the Greek and means “glue”. We put all these cells, yet with very different roles and very different origins, in the same general basket of brain "glue". Microglia come from the immune system, they hunt down and “eat” damaged neurons or fight infections. They also play a crucial role in the elimination of synapses and therefore in the communication of neurons


Video Award

Lina Marcela Carmona | Costa lab

Funding: Helen Hay Whitney Fellowship

Movement dictates our interaction with the world, but all actions must first be learned. This process of motor learning involves many regions in the brain some of which are crucial as you begin to learn the skill and others which are involved as you start progressing towards proficiency. However, we do not have a global view of the total number of regions involved, the degree of their engagement, and their involvement as learning progresses. To examine this, mice were taught to pull a small wheel, a task which they can learn in a few weeks. By using the protein FOS, we can mark cells that are engaged as the mice learn this task. This video comprehensively shows the broad engagement of cells throughout the mouse brain during early motor learning.


Explore all of the inspiring image entries below.