9.912/MCB 206 Introduction to Connectomics
http://hebb.mit.edu/courses/connectomics/
Graduate seminar class at MIT and Harvard, Fall 2007
Organizers: Sebastian Seung (seung@mit.edu),
Jeff Lichtman (jeff@mcb.harvard.edu),
and Clay Reid (clay_reid@hms.harvard.edu)
Units: 3-0-6
Prereq: Basic knowledge of neuroscience (undergraduates by permission of instructor)
Time: Tuesdays, 3-6pm (With the exception of two Thursdays listed below. First
meeting: Sept. 18 at Harvard)
Place: Alternating between 16 Divinity Ave., room 1068* and 43 Vassar St., 46-3015;
* Harvard classroom change to new location as of 11/13/07: 16 Divinity Ave.,
Biolabs room 2080
Requirements: Class participation and term paper
Timetable for term paper:
Specific Aims (1 page) - due 11/27/07
Meetings with Faculty - 11/30/07
Due date for term paper:
MIT students - December 12, 2007
Harvard students - January 11, 2008
Guest lecturers:
- Sydney Brenner (Salk/Janelia Farm)
- Kevin Briggman (MPI-Heidelberg)
- Mitya Chklovskii (Janelia Farm)
- Winfried Denk (MPI-Heidelberg)
- Scott Emmons (Albert Einstein)
- David Hall (Albert Einstein)
- Ken Hayworth (USC)
- Bobby Kasthuri (Harvard)
- Jean Livet (Harvard)
- Carlos Lois (MIT)
- Richard Masland (Harvard)
- Ian Meinertzhagen (Dalhousie)
- Gerry Rubin (Janelia Farm)
- Joshua Sanes (Harvard)
- Stephen Smith (Stanford)
- Peter Sterling (U. Penn.)
- Ian Wickersham (MIT)
- Xiaowei Zhuang (Harvard)
Connectomics is an emerging field defined by the high-throughput generation of data about neural connectivity, and the subsequent mining of that data for knowledge about the brain. A connectome is a summary of the structure of a neural network, an annotated list of all synaptic connections between the neurons inside a brain or brain region. To make connectomics a reality, new tools are needed for the automated generation of three-dimensional nanoscale images of brain tissue, and the automated analysis of the resulting teravoxel or petavoxel datasets. This class will survey tool development in the areas of imaging, cutting, staining, and computation. Nanoscale imaging, including electron microscopy and sub-diffraction-limit fluorescence microscopy. Nanoscale and microscale cutting. Fluorescent and electron-dense staining. Image analysis algorithms. Case studies: C. elegans, fly, neuromuscular innervation, retina, cortex.
- Sept 18 (Harvard)
- Sept 27 (MIT)
- Oct 2 (Harvard)
- Oct 9 (MIT)
- Oct 16 (Harvard)
- Oct 23 (MIT)
- Oct 30 (Harvard)
- Image segmentation and registration (Sebastian Seung)
- V. Jain, J. F. Murray, F. Roth, S. Turaga, V. Zhigulin, K. L. Briggman,
M. N. Helmstaedter, W. Denk, and H. S. Seung. Supervised
Learning of Image Restoration with Convolutional Networks. Forthcoming
in Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision
(ICCV) 2007, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2007, in press).
- V. Jain, J. F. Murray, F. Roth, S. Turaga, V. Zhigulin, K. L. Briggman,
M. N. Helmstaedter, W. Denk, and H. S. Seung. Supervised
Learning of Image Restoration with Convolutional Networks - Supplementary
Material: Specific Methods.
- Nov 8 (MIT)
- Nov 13 (Harvard)
- Nov 20 (MIT)
- Jeff Lichtman: "The Principles and Practice of Fluorescence Microscopy"
- Joshua Sanes: "Expressing Fluorescent Proteins in Neurons"
- Jean Livet: "Visualizing Neuronal Circuits in Transgenic Mice"
- J. W. Lichtman and J.-A. Conchello. Fluorescence
Microscopy. Nature Methods 2: 910-919 (2005).
- G. Feng, R. H. Mellor, M. Bernstein, C. Keller-Peck, Q. T. Nguyen, M.
Wallace, J. M. Nerbonne, J. W. Lichtman, and J. R. Sanes. Imaging
Neuronal Subsets in Transgenic Mice Expressing Multiple Spectral Variants
of GFP. Neuron 28: 41-51 (2000).
- J. Livet, T. A. Weissman, H. Kang, R. W. Draft, J. Lu, R. A. Bennis,
J. R. Sanes, and J. W. Lichtman. Transgenic
strategies for combinatorial expression of fluorescent proteins in the
nervous system. Nature 450: 56-62 (2007).
- Nov 27 (Harvard - Biolabs room 2080)
- Jean Livet: "Visualizing Neuronal Circuits in Transgenic Mice"
(continuing from Nov. 20th)
- Ian Wickersham: "Transcomplemented Transsynaptic Tracing"
- I. R. Wickersham, S. Finke, K.-K. Conzelmann, and E. M. Callaway. Retrograde
neuronal tracing with a deletion-mutant rabies virus. Nature Methods
4: 47-49 (2007).
- I. R. Wickersham, D. C. Lyon, R. J. O. Barnard, T. Mori, S. Finke, K.-K.
Conzelmann, J. A. T. Young, and E. M. Callaway. Monosynaptic
Restriction of Transsynaptic Tracing from Single, Genetically Targeted
Neurons. Neuron 53: 639-647 (2007).
- Dec 4 (MIT)
- Dec 11 (Harvard - Biolabs room 2080)
- Xiaowei Zhuang: "Super-resolution fluorescence imaging"
- Carlos Lois: "Development and Neuronal Circuit Assembly"
- W. Kelsch, C. P. Mosley, C.-W. Lin, and C. Lois. Distinct
Mammalian Precursors Are Committed to Generate Neurons with Defined Dendritic
Projection Patterns. PLoS Biology v. 5, no. 11, e300, doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0050300
(2007).
- Readings for Zhuang lecture:
- S.W. Hell. Far-Field Optical Nanoscopy. Science
316: 1153-1158 (2007).
- E. Betzig, G. H. Patterson, R. Sougrat, O. W. Lindwasser, S. Olenych,
J. S. Bonifacino, M. W. Davidson, J. Lippincott-Schwartz, and H. F. Hess.
Imaging Intracellular Fluorescent Proteins at Nanometer
Resolution. Science 313: 1642-1645 (2006).
- M. G. L. Gustafsson. Nonlinear structured-illumination
microscopy: Wide-field fluorescence imaging with theoretically unlimited
resolution. PNAS 102: 13081-13086 (2005).
- M. Bates, B. Huang, G. T. Dempsey, and X. Zhuang. Multicolor
Super-Resolution Imaging with Photo-Switchable Fluorescent Probes.
Science 317: 1749-1753 (2007).
- M. J. Rust, M. Bates, and X. Zhuang. Sub-diffraction-limit
imaging by stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM). Nature
Methods 3: 793-795 (2006).
Most classes are on Tuesday, but there are two exceptions, Thurs Sept. 27 and
Thurs Nov. 8, due to conflicts with the Janelia Farm meeting on Neural
Circuit Reconstruction and the Society for Neuroscience annual meeting.
Like the normal Tuesday classes, the Thursday classes will also be 3-6pm.