SignificanceLight-sheet fluorescence microscopy is a powerful technique for high-speed volumetric functional imaging. However, in typical light-sheet microscopes, the illumination and collection optics impose significant constraints upon the imaging of non-transparent brain tissues. Here, we demonstrate that these constraints can be surmounted using a new class of implantable photonic neural probes. AimMass manufacturable, silicon-based light-sheet photonic neural probes can generate planar patterned illumination at arbitrary depths in brain tissues without any additional micro-optic components. ApproachWe develop implantable photonic neural probes that generate light sheets in tissue. The probes were fabricated in a photonics foundry on 200 mm diameter silicon wafers. The light sheets were characterized in fluorescein and in free space. The probe-enabled imaging approach was tested in fixed and in vitro mouse brain tissues. Imaging tests were also performed using fluorescent beads suspended in agarose. ResultsThe probes had 5 to 10 addressable sheets and average sheet thicknesses < 16 m for propagation distances up to 300 m in free space. Imaging areas were as large as {approx} 240 m x 490 m in brain tissue. Image contrast was enhanced relative to epifluorescence microscopy. ConclusionsThe neural probes can lead to new variants of light-sheet fluorescence microscopy for deep brain imaging and experiments in freely-moving animals.
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