IMAGE

Fig. S6

ID
ZDB-IMAGE-190730-1
Source
Figures for Andalman et al., 2019
Image
Figure Caption

Fig. S6

Brainwide Responses to vHb ChR Stimulation, Related to Figure 6

(A) Max-projection of confocal stack of 15 dpf Tg(ppp1r14ab:Gal4-VP16; UAS:ChR2-mCherry;elavl3:h2b-GCaMP6s) (scale bar = 150μm; yellow box demarcates region shown in Figure 6B). (B) The speed of ChR+ fish (blue, n = 9) and ChR– clutch mates (black, n = 16) in response to BC (left) followed by recovery in a visually distinct tank and then two minutes of 460 nm light pulses (20 Hz; 5 ms duration; 1 mW/mm2). ChR+ fish showed a significantly lower movement rate than ChR– fish during the stimulation period (p = 0.0184). (C) Outward photocurrents in an in vivo voltage-clamped mCherry+ vHb neuron from a Tg(dao:Gal4-VP16; UAS:NpHR-mCherry) fish (left) and mCherry– neuron from the same fish (right). Photocurrents were evoked by 2 s of 560 nm continuous light (yellow bars; average response indicated by solid black line; n = 3 pulses for both NpHR+ and NpHR–). (D) The percentage of cells in each fish that showed a significant excitatory (upper) or inhibitory (lower) response in the two seconds following stimulation in ChR+ fish (blue, n = 6) and ChR- fish (black, n = 4) in several regions both ipsilateral to stimulation (left) and contralateral (right). (E) The percentage of cells significantly responding 8-10 s post-stimulation. Error bars and shaded regions are s.e.m. All statistical tests are Student’s t tests unless otherwise indicated (p < 0.05; ∗∗p < 0.01; ∗∗∗p < 0.001).

Acknowledgments
This image is the copyrighted work of the attributed author or publisher, and ZFIN has permission only to display this image to its users. Additional permissions should be obtained from the applicable author or publisher of the image.

Reprinted from Cell, 177(4), Andalman, A.S., Burns, V.M., Lovett-Barron, M., Broxton, M., Poole, B., Yang, S.J., Grosenick, L., Lerner, T.N., Chen, R., Benster, T., Mourrain, P., Levoy, M., Rajan, K., Deisseroth, K., Neuronal Dynamics Regulating Brain and Behavioral State Transitions, 970-985.e20, Copyright (2019) with permission from Elsevier. Full text @ Cell