Abstract
Cerebellar dysfunction leads to postural instability. Recent work in freely moving rodents has transformed investigations of cerebellar contributions to posture. However, the combined complexity of terrestrial locomotion and the rodent cerebellum motivate development of new approaches to perturb cerebellar function in simpler vertebrates. Here, we used a powerful chemogenetic tool (TRPV1/capsaicin) to define the role of Purkinje cells — the output neurons of the cerebellar cortex — as larval zebrafish swam freely in depth. We achieved both bidirectional control (activation and ablation) of Purkinje cells while performing quantitative high-throughput assessment of posture and locomotion. Activation disrupted postural control in the pitch (nose-up/nose-down) axis. Similarly, ablations disrupted pitch-axis posture and fin-body coordination responsible for climbs. Postural disruption was more widespread in older larvae, offering a window into emergent roles for the developing cerebellum in the control of posture. Finally, we found that activity in Purkinje cells could individually and collectively encode tilt direction, a key feature of postural control neurons. Our findings delineate an expected role for the cerebellum in postural control and vestibular sensation in larval zebrafish, establishing the validity of TRPV1/capsaicin-mediated perturbations in a simple, genetically-tractable vertebrate. Moreover, by comparing the contributions of Purkinje cell ablations to posture in time, we uncover signatures of emerging cerebellar control of posture across early development. This work takes a major step towards understanding an ancestral role of the cerebellum in regulating postural maturation.
Introduction
Cerebellar activity underlies proper posture and balance in vertebrates 1–8. The cerebellum integrates sensory information from vestibular (balance), visual, and proprioceptive systems 3. These sensations are transformed into precise adjustments in muscle tone and contraction allowing animals to resist destabilizing forces and maintain proper posture 9. Disruptions to mature cerebellar function lead to instability, unsteady gait and a compromised sense of balance 10.
Kinematic quantification by pose estimation in rodents 11,12 has opened a window into cerebellar contributions to postural behaviors in health and disease 8,13,14. However, terrestrial gait and locomotion are complex. In contrast, the biophysical challenges of maintaining posture underwater are straightforward to define 15,16. For example, larval zebrafish balance in the pitch axis (nose-up/nose-down) by timing locomotion to countermand gravity-induced destabilization 17,18 and by coordinated use of paired appendages (fins) and axial musculature (trunk) 19. The small size and rapid development of the larval zebrafish allow high-throughput measurements of these movements from freely swimming subjects 20.
The larval zebrafish is a powerful model to investigate cerebellar development and function 21. Anatomically, the zebrafish cerebellum shares the same circuit structure as the mammalian cerebellum 22. The zebrafish cerebellum is compartmentalized into regions with distinct response properties and output targets 22–26. Multimodal representations were found in both cerebellar granule cells 27,28 and Purkinje cells, the output neurons of the cerebellar cortex 25,29. Functional assays established a role for the larval zebrafish cerebellum in motor control, sensorimotor integration and predictive neural processing, particularly in response to visual input 30–38. Finally, brain-wide imaging studies have established balance-relevant sensitivity in the cerebellum, identifying neurons that encode body angle and velocity 39 and neurons responsive to direct inner-ear stimulation 40. Overwhelmingly, this work has been done in reduced or restrained preparations, limiting insight into the cerebellar contribution to natural behaviors.
Powerful new opto- and chemogenetic 41 approaches allow control of particular cerebellar cell types, reviewed in 42. Recent work used such activation/inhibition to investigate cerebellar contributions to sensorimotor 43–46 and non-sensorimotor behaviors 47–50 in health and disease 51–53. Both approaches come with technical hurdles: optogenetics requires targeting light to the cerebellum, while chemogenetics uses bioactive co-factors 54. A chemogenetic approach to cerebellar control with a non-bioactive ligand would be a welcome advance, particularly to study posture without visual interference (i.e. in the dark). One path forward is to express the rat non-selective cation channel TRPV1 and its ligand capsaicin in zebrafish 55. The endogenous zebrafish TRPV1 channel is capsaicin-insensitive 56, so targeted expression of rat TRPV1 allows cell-type specific control: low-doses of capsaicin can activate sensory and hypothalamic neurons while high-doses are excitotoxic 55. Capsaicin can be dissolved in water and is readily absorbed by freely-swimming larval zebrafish, sidestepping invasive procedures and the need for visible light. Finally, the conductance of a TRP channel is ∼1000x that of a channelrhodopsin 57 suggesting that even low levels of TRPV1 expression will be biologically effective.
Here we used the TRPV1/capsaicin system to investigate the contribution of cerebellar Purkinje cells to postural behaviors as larval zebrafish swam freely in depth. Both activation and ablation of Purkinje cells could induce changes in pitch axis posture. Ablation in older larvae resulted in bigger disruptions to posture, allowing inference of the functional consequences of cerebellar development. Furthermore, ablation of Purkinje cells in older larvae disrupted the coordination of trunk and paired appendages (fins), impairing vertical navigation. Finally, we could reliably decode pitch-tilt direction from patterns of Purkinje cell activity. Taken together our results establish a clear role for the cerebellum in larval zebrafish postural control, even during the earliest stages of development. More broadly, our work establishes a powerful new method to manipulate cerebellar output while performing quantitative high-throughput measures of unconstrained posture and locomotion. Our data are therefore a step towards defining an ancestral role for the highly-conserved cerebellum in postural control.
Results
A new reagent for chemogenetic activation or ablation of Purkinje cells
We used a new reagent to control Purkinje cells: the transgenic line Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP). Fish in this line express rat TRPV1, a capsaicin-sensitive non-selective cation channel, exclusively in cerebellar Purkinje cells (Figures 1A and 1B). Endogenous zebrafish TRPV1 channels are insensitive to capsaicin 56. Previous descriptions of rat TRPV1 in zebrafish sensory and hypothalamic neurons establish dose-dependent chemogenetic manipulation 55. We expect low-doses of capsaicin to depolarize Purkinje cells (Figure 1C, left), while high-doses should be excitotoxic (Figure 1C, right).
First, we assayed capsaicin concentrations and incubation times to identify a dose that would achieve long-term depolarization without cell death. We co-expressed a nuclear-targeted calcium indicator, GCaMP6f (Figure 1D) in all neurons (Tg(elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) for longitudinal imaging of neuronal activity. Previous work used 1 µM of capsaicin for long-term activation 55. We therefore imaged the cerebellum of Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP);Tg(elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) fish prior to and 3, 6, and 9 hours after 1 µM capsaicin treatment (Figure 1D).
Prolonged exposure to a low dose of capsaicin increased cerebellar activity (Figure 1E). At each timepoint, TRPV1-expressing cells showed increased intensity relative to a pre-capsaicin baseline, while TRPV1-negative cells did not (Figure 1E) (3/6/9h post 1 µM capsaicin: 32%/20%/20%/ TRPV1+ cells F/F0 > 2; 25/2 cells/animals vs 0%/0%/0%/ TRPV1-cells F/F0 > 2; 4/1 cells/animals).
Different cells showed increased activity at the 3,6, and 9 hour timepoints, and the same cells were differentially active at different timepoints. We interpret this as evidence that 1 µM of capsaicin could sporadically activate subsets of Purkinje cells. Notably, in one fish that had particularly strong tagRFP expression we observed a small number of neurons at the 9h timepoint with bright, speckled fluorescence suggestive of cell death (Figure S1B). We therefore set an upper limit of 6h of exposure to 1 µM capsaicin for activation experiments.
Induced activation was reversible, even after prolonged exposure to 1 µM of capsaicin. We tested whether the elevated patterns of neuronal activity that we observed in the presence of capsaicin would return to baseline by imaging cerebellar Purkinje cells in Tg(elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) before exposure, after 6h of 1 µM capsaicin, and 40min after washout. Relative to baseline, fluorescent intensities increased after 6h, as in Figure 1E. Importantly, fluorescence returned to baseline levels after 40min of washout (Figure S1A) (6h post 1 µM capsaicin: 40.9%/ TRPV1+ cells F/F0 > 2; washout: 0%/ TRPV1+ cells F/F0 > 2; 22/3 cells/animals). We conclude that capsaicin-induced activation is reversible after washout.
Exposure to high doses of capsaicin caused rapid axonal degeneration and cell death. We developed a protocol for Purkinje cell lesion: Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP) larvae (without GCaMP6f) were imaged at 7 dpf, at 8 dpf after 1 h of 10 µM capsaicin treatment and again at 9 dpf (Figure 1G). Timelapse imaging of the Purkinje cell axons showed rapid degeneration already 15min after capsaicin treatment started (Figure 1F). Cell numbers rapidly declined after 1h of 10 µM capsaicin treatment and did not show any signs of recovery at 9 dpf (Figures 1G and 1H) (median (inter-quartile range); 7 dpf: control 213 (76) cells vs. pre lesion 282 (81) cells; 9 dpf: control 218 (49) cells vs. post lesion 68 (18) cells; 3/3 control animals/lesion animals).
Consistent with prior work in other cell populations 55, we found that chemogenetic use of the capsaicin/TRPV1 system can be used to reversibly activate or rapidly ablate cerebellar Purkinje cells in larval zebrafish.
Purkinje cells regulate postural control
We used our Scalable Apparatus to Measure Posture and Locomotion (SAMPL) to measure posture and locomotion in freely swimming zebrafish 20. SAMPL is a high-throughput videographic approach that measures kinematic parameters of posture and locomotion from fish swimming in a predominantly vertical arena that encourages navigation in depth (Figures 2A and 2B). Larval zebrafish locomote in discrete bouts of rapid translation (Figure 2B, grey lines). To navigate up/down, fish sequence these bouts while maintaining a nose-up/nose-down pitch. Notably, climb/dive bouts are defined relative to the trajectory of the bout. Climb/dive bouts can therefore be initiated from either nose-up (positive) or nose-down (negative) postures.
Nose-up “climb” bouts (Figure 2E) engage both axial musculature of the body and the fins to produce a net upward trajectory while nose-down “dive” bouts (Figure 2J) rely on axial musculature alone and have a net downward trajectory 19. Notably, posture after either climb or dive bouts tends to increase, a consequence of restorative rotations that counteract destabilizing torques 18. SAMPL’s automated and high-throughput nature yields data with large numbers of observations. To ensure a focus on only the most meaningful differences, we adopted two stringent criteria for significance: p-values <0.05, and an effect size of ≥ 15%. All p-values and effect sizes are reported in Tables 1 to 5.
We used the timing and capsaicin concentrations we had previously validated (Figure 1) to design two behavioral paradigms: one to activate and one to ablate cerebellar Purkinje cells. Experiments were done from 7–9 dpf, and began with a single day without perturbations; no differences between groups were observed during this time (Tables 1 and 2). Activation was then achieved by exposing Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP); Tg(elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) fish to two 6h periods of 1 µM capsaicin while they swam freely in the dark (Figure 2C). Alternatively, Purkinje cells were ablated by exposing Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP) fish to 10 µM of capsaicin for 1h (Figure 2D). All fish were screened before experiments for comparable levels of tagRFP fluorescence and control and experimental groups were randomly selected. A single experimental repeat consisted of 1-3 apparatus run in parallel with fish from a single clutch of embryos (i.e. siblings). To maintain consistency with genotypes used for validation, the activation and ablation experiments had different backgrounds (i.e. the presence/absence of the elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) allele). Because of background variation 20, all comparisons were restricted to control vs. experimental groups within an experimental paradigm over the same time period. Across our datasets (Tables 1 to 3) we did not observe meaningful differences between the control and experimental groups in the pre-manipulation period. To avoid adding noise to our estimates of effect size, we therefore report comparisons between control and experimental groups after perturbation.
We did not observe global consequences for swimming: swim speed, swim frequency and bout duration were unaffected during Purkinje cell activation or after Purkinje cell lesion. Similarly, bout numbers (prior to filtering/excluding experiments) were not different between the control and activation (median (inter-quartile range) 1256 (883) bouts vs. 656 (1041) bouts; p-value 0.46) or lesion groups (1949 (1089) bouts vs. 1901 (795) bouts; p-value 0.84, Tables 1 and 2).
Climbing postures were perturbed after both activation and ablation of Purkinje cells. During activation, fish adopted more nose-up postures before and throughout climb bouts. We observed a shift towards more positive values across the distribution of postures before fish initiated a climb bout (Figure 2F). Across experimental repeats, the average climb posture of fish during depolarization was 29% higher than in control fish (Figure 2G, median [95% confidence interval]: 14.7° [14.0, 15.4]° vs. 19.0° [18.5, 19.7]°, p-value < 0.001, effect size: 29%). Similarly, after Purkinje cell lesion,the average climb posture increased 36% relative to controls (Figures 2H and 2I, 10.0° [9.5, 10.7]° vs. 13.6° [13.1, 14.3]°, p-value < 0.001, effect size: 36%).
We observed an unexpected decrease in the climb posture for control fish in the post-lesion period (from 18.0° [17.6, 18.4]° to 10.0° [9.5, 10.7], Table 2). We do not have an explanation for this particular change. Notably, if we assess the effect of adding 10 µM capsaicin by comparing the magnitude of the relative difference between pre- and post-lesion periods, normalized to the pre-lesion period, we still see a significant difference (control vs lesion: -46% vs -26%). We conclude that, even when accounting for observed changes between control fish at 7 vs. 8 dpf, Purkinje cell ablation disrupts climb postures.
Dive bout postures were similarly perturbed after activation, but not ablation of Purkinje cells. Fish adopted more nose-down postures before and throughout dive bouts with a leftward shift of the distribution of postures before dive bouts (Figure 2K). Average dive bout posture was 24% more negative than in control animals (Figure 2L, median [95% confidence interval]: -16.6° [-16.9, -16.1]° vs. -20.5° [-20.9, -20.1]°, p-value < 0.001, effect size = 24%). Purkinje cell lesions at 7 dpf did not shift the average posture for dive bouts (Figures 2M and 2N -11.7° [-11.9, -11.5]° vs. -11.2° [-11.4, -11.0]°, p-value = 0.002, effect size = -4%).
We interpret these data as evidence that Purkinje cell activity is crucial to ensure that posture during climbs and dives is maintained within a normal range.
Loss of Purkinje cells in older fish results in more pronounced deficits to posture
Over the first two weeks of life, larval zebrafish morphology and postural control strategies develop considerably 17. These changes are matched by similarly pronounced cerebellar growth 58 (Figures 3A and 3B). We observed that the number of Purkinje cells labelled in Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP) roughly doubled between 7 and 14 dpf (Figure 3C, median (inter-quartile range) 7 dpf 282 (81); 14 dpf 662 (142)). The increase in cell numbers is also evidence that the aldoca promoter continued to drive expression at later stages, allowing us to perform comparative experiments.
Similar to lesions at 7 dpf, we did not observe any differences in swim speed, frequency or bout duration (Table 3). At 14 dpf, the effects of Purkinje cell lesions on posture were more widespread than at 7 dpf. We repeated our previous ablation experiments (Figure 2D) between 14–16 dpf, and analyzed climb (Figure 3D) and dive bouts (Figure 3E). Loss of Purkinje cells created more widespread behavioral deficits. Specifically, climb bout posture was increased by 20% after Purkinje cell lesion (median [95% confidence interval]: 14.3° [13.8, 14.8] vs. 17.1° [16.2, 17.8]; p-value < 0.001; effect size: 20%). At 14 dpf we also observed an effect on dive bout postures. After lesion dive bouts postures were 26% more negative (-9.8° [-10.1, -9.5]° vs. -12.3° [-12.6, -11.9]°; p-value < 0.001; effect size: 26%).
We conclude that, consistent with morphological growth, Purkinje cells of the cerebellum play a broader role in postural control at 14 dpf than at younger ages.
Purkinje cells regulate speed-dependent fin engagement
To climb, larval zebrafish coordinate fin movements that generate lift with axial rotations that direct thrust (Figure 4A). The greater the axial rotation, the stronger the lift-producing fin movements; this relationship increases as larvae develop 19. Our previous work suggested that Purkinje cells were necessary for such fin-body coordination 19. Here, we observed that fin engagement is speed-dependent, with faster bouts producing greater lift for a given axial rotation (Figure 4B, left).
After Purkinje cell ablation, 14 dpf fish produced less lift than expected when they swam fast. We divided swim bouts into three different bins according to their peak speed (slow: 5–7.5mm/s; medium: 7.5–15mm/s; fast >15mm/s) for both control and fish treated with 10 µM capsaicin. We parameterized the relationship between upward rotation and lift by fitting a line to swim bouts for each speed. After capsaicin exposure, the slopes of the medium and fast speed bins were significantly lower (Figure 4C), reflecting a loss of speed-dependent modulation (median [95% confidence interval]: slope slow: 0.028 [0.022, 0.034] mm/° vs. 0.028 [0.020, 0.037] mm/°, p-value = 0.51, effect size: 0%; slope medium: 0.053 [0.045, 0.061] mm/° vs. 0.029 [0.022, 0.032] mm/°, p-value <0.001, effect size: -36%; slope fast: 0.066 [0.056, 0.080] mm/° vs. 0.046 [0.038, 0.056] mm/°, p-value <0.001, effect size: -31%). Next, to determine if lift was fin-dependent, we amputated the fins and repeated our experiments. We observed a near total loss of lift at all speeds; regardless of the speed bin, the slope of the relationship between upward rotation and lift was indistinguishable from zero (slope slow: 0.032 [0.026, 0.039] mm/° vs. -0.005 [-0.008, -0.002] mm/°, p-value <0.00.1; effect size: -50%; slope medium: 0.058 [0.050, 0.065] mm/° vs. -0.004 [-0.006, -0.003] mm/°, p-value <0.001; effect size: -86%; slope fast: 0.073 [0.059, 0.085] mm/° vs. 0.019 [0.015, 0.025] mm/°, p-value <0.001; effect size: -74%). Finally, we examined fin-body coordination in our 7 dpf activation and ablation datasets. In contrast to older larvae, we observed no meaningful changes after activation of Purkinje cells at 7 dpf. For Purkinje cell lesions at 7 dpf we found only the fin body coordination at fast bouts to be affected Tables 1 and 2.
Our data show that loss of Purkinje cells disrupts the speed-dependent increase in fin-mediated lift in older, and to a lesser degree in younger fish. We interpret this finding as evidence that Purkinje cells are indispensable for normal coordination of the fins and body.
Purkinje cells encode pitch direction at both individual and population levels
Our experiments establish that manipulations of Purkinje cells interfere with balance in the pitch axis. We therefore hypothesized that Purkinje cell activity would be modulated by nose-up/nose-down body tilts. We used Tilt In Place Microscopy (TIPM) 20 to measure the response of individual Purkinje cells (Figure 5A) to rapid pitch tilts. Briefly, fish are mounted on a mirror galvanometer and rapidly rotated to eccentric angles (Figure 5B, ±30°nose-up/nose-down).
We used Tg(aldoca:GAL4);Tg(UAS:GCaMP6s) to label Purkinje cells in the lateral parts of the cerebellum thought to receive vestibular input 24,33,59. To facilitate identification of the same cells from volumes imaged at both ± 30°, we used doubly mono-allelic fish and screened for sparse expression of Purkinje cells. In total, we imaged 43 Purkinje cells from 8 fish. Of those, 31 cells could reliably identified at ±30° and were included in the analysis.
Individual Purkinje cells showed either directionally-tuned (Figure 5C, n=18) or untuned (Figure 5D, n=13) patterns of responses. Tuned cells were distributed throughout the lateral cerebellum (Figure 5E), and showed a slight preference for nose-down stimuli (12 vs. 6, Figure 5F). We did not observe any systematic differences in the response properties across each experiment from untuned cells (Figure 5G).
While untuned cells did not show overt directional preferences, pooling their responses allowed decoding of stimulus direction. We were motivated to model decoding because principal component analysis of the integral of the full responses on each trial from untuned neurons showed near-complete segregation of trial types (Figure 5H). To assay whether there was indeed directional information we trained a decoder (support vector machine) and tested its accuracy on pseudo-populations of different sizes ranging from 3 - 13 cells (Figure 5I). Training and test trials were different to avoid over-fitting. Pseudo-populations with more than 3 cells achieved accurate decoding well above chance levels (determined by shuffling trial identity)(median (inter-quartile range) accuracy: 3/5/7/10/13 cells: 0.78 (0.68-0.91) / 0.88 (0.70-0.88) / 1 (0.84-1) / 1 (0.97-1) / 1 (1-1)).
Older larvae showed additional changes to dive postures after Purkinje cell lesions. We therefore tested if: (1) Purkinje cells in older larvae exhibited differences in the numbers or direction of tuned cells or (2) if population-level decoding accuracy changed. We performed longitudinal TIPM, sampling from zebrafish larvae at 7 and 14 dpf. To improve throughput, we recorded the responses upon return from ± 19° stimuli (Figure S2A) (7 dpf: 138/11 cells/fish; 14 dpf: 90/7 cells/fish; of those 23/3 cells/fish were imaged at both timepoints); previous work established that responses upon return to baseline are highly correlated with the response at the eccentric position 60. We observed increased fluorescence relative to baseline values in 7 dpf and 14 dpf Purkinje cells upon return from ± 19° steps (Figure S2B and Figure S2C). To analyze directional tuning we compared the maximum fluorescence in the first second after return to baseline. The relative number of tuned cells per fish was comparable between 7 and 14 dpf larvae (Figure S2D; median (interquartile range) at 7 dpf: 7 (6-34)%; 14 dpf: 8 (2-19)%; p-value = 0.7763). While most cells were not directionally selective, the preferred direction of tuned cells was different at 7 and 14 dpf: at 7 dpf more Purkinje cells were nose-down tuned (2/31 up/down) but at 14 dpf more cells were nose-up tuned (11/3 up/down Figure S2E; Fisher’s exact test, p-value < 0.001).
We next assayed accuracy of directional encoding of untuned cells. We performed principal component analysis of untuned cells at 7 (Figure S2F) and 14 dpf (Figure S2G) and tested decoding accuracy on the untuned cells of individual fish at 7 and 14 dpf. We did not observe differences in decoding accuracy between 7 and 14 dpf larvae (Figure S2H; median (interquartile range) 7 dpf: 0.68 (0.63-0.83); 14 dpf: 0.73 (0.65-0.79); p-value = 0.9468).
We conclude that cerebellar Purkinje cells can encode pitch direction both at the single neuron and population levels with similar encoding accuracy in young and older larvae.
Discussion
We used a novel chemogenetic tool to define the role of cerebellar Purkinje cells in postural behavior as larval zebrafish swam freely in depth. Activation of Purkinje cells could induce changes in pitch axis (nose-up/nose-down) posture. Purkinje cell ablation disrupted posture, with broader effects in older larvae. Ablation disrupted fin-body coordination responsible for proper climbing. Finally, we could reliably decode pitch-tilt direction from patterns of Purkinje cell activity. We did not observe developmental changes in population coding of direction but found a shift in the tuning direction of Purkinje cells. Taken together our results establish a role for the cerebellum in postural control even during the earliest stages of larval zebrafish development. Our work establishes a powerful new method that combines bidirectional manipulation of cerebellar output and quantitative high-throughput measures of unconstrained posture and locomotion.
Contributions of Purkinje cells to posture
While activation and ablation manipulations both produced biologically meaningful behavior changes, the two experiments were run with different genetic backgrounds and on different generations of the SAMPL apparatus. Consequentially, our ability to define precisely what role Purkinje cells play in balance behaviors in larval zebrafish is limited. Activation experiments are particularly laborious as they require thorough pre-screening to ensure adequate brightness levels to achieve sufficient depolarization without excitotoxicity. Given that the primary purpose of this series of experiments was to establish TRPV1-mediated manipulation of Purkinje cells as a means to investigate postural control, it is beyond the scope of the work to repeat the experiments. Nonetheless, we consider the findings individually below in the context of prior work.
Purkinje cell ablations disrupt postural stability. Importantly, the differences we observed were more widespread in older larvae, underscoring the developmental importance of Purkinje cells for balance. Purkinje cell output is inhibitory 61,62, Purkinje cells in the lateral cerebellum project to vestibular nuclei 24,33, and Purkinje cells are tonically active 63,64. We propose that the net effect of Purkinje cell loss would be disinhibition of target nuclei responsible for encoding posture and parameterizing corrective pitch-axis behaviors. While the precise nature of the transformation between larval zebrafish pitch and posture control kinematics is not yet known, loss of cerebellar-targeted nuclei can disrupt postural behaviors 19,65.
The effects of ablations became more widespread in older larvae. During early development, larval zebrafish grow in volume by roughly an order of magnitude and shift their postural control strategies to better climb/dive as they navigate in depth 17,19. Unlike climb bouts, disruptions to postural stability during dives only emerge at 14 dpf. As activation of Purkinje cells produced meaningful disruptions during dives at 7 dpf, we infer that the delayed emergence of ablation effects does not reflect incomplete integration of Purkinje cells into dive-control circuits. Instead, we propose that the delay reveals the functional emergence of Purkinje cell control of dives across development. Notably, the basal posture during dive bouts decreases in older control animals (Figure 3E) — ablation shifts the posture comparable to its younger state. Future work with our system enables testing of the hypothesis that Purkinje cell output plays a role in setting the postures older fish adopt during dives.
Purkinje cell activation also disrupts postural stability. Intriguingly, activation broadened the distribution of observed postures in the same way as ablation. Our imaging assay established that 1 µM of capsaicin would stochastically activate subsets of Purkinje cells. This stochasticity could reflect normal fluctuations in basal levels of activity, or it could arise from cells going in and out of depolarization block 66. Synchronized/precisely-timed Purkinje cell output is thought to shape movements 67–72, though perhaps not for all behaviors 73. Our imaging suggests that the set of Purkinje cells activated at any one moment in time is limited and random. We therefore propose that the net effect of 1 µM of capsaicin is ultimately disruptive to Purkinje cell synchrony, and thus likely disruptive. Future work could test this hypothesis by intracellular recording from cerebello-recipient populations like the vestibular nuclei 74,75
Previously, we reported that larval zebrafish coordinate their fins and trunk to climb effectively 19. The relationship between trunk-mediated changes to trajectory (upward rotation) and fin-mediated lift depends on locomotor speed. Here we observed that after Purkinje cell loss, speed-dependent increases in lift with greater trunk rotation are disrupted (Figure 4C). As we did not observe any change to locomotor speed after ablation (Tables 1 to 3), we infer that Purkinje cell loss disrupts speed-dependent coordination for climbing. These results extend our original report where a lower-throughput method (photoablation) suggested that Purkinje cell loss impacted the fin-trunk relationship 19. In larval zebrafish, the neuronal substrates for axial speed control 76–81 and fin engagement 82 are known. The potential for whole-brain imaging in larval zebrafish 35, particularly with high-speed voltage indicators 83 and cutting-edge modeling approaches 84, stands to reveal how Purkinje cell activity comes to coordinate body and fin movements. Importantly, since our behavioral data suggest that Purkinje cell activity impacts fin-trunk coordination more strongly in older larvae, longitudinal approaches will be key to understanding the developmental changes to cerebellar signaling that underlie effective coordination of trunk and limbs.
Encoding strategies for body tilt stimuli
Purkinje cell activity reflects both sensory and motor inputs. One limitation of TIPM is that larvae are immobilized in agarose during tilts. Consequentially, our measurements of Purkinje cell activity are artificially constrained. Nonetheless, a subset of Purkinje cells were unambiguously direction-selective, and a simple decoder could use the activity of non-selective cells to differentiate tilt direction. We infer that vestibular information directly related to pitch axis posture is represented by the Purkinje cell population targeted in our ablation/activation experiments, consistent with broader imaging of cerebellar responses to body tilt 39,40. Similar to the behavior results, we observed an asymmetry in the tuning direction of Purkinje cells at 7 dpf, with more cells being tuned to the nose-down direction. This asymmetry shifted between 7 and 14 dpf, suggesting developmental changes in how navigation in the pitch axis is processed in the cerebellum. These changes underscore the importance of longitudinal measurements of Purkinje cell activity across early development to understand emergent control of posture.
The ability to decode tilt direction from the collective activity of “untuned” Purkinje cells suggests a role for population coding. Such mechanisms have been proposed for head/body motion 85 and eye movements 73,86 in the primate cerebellum. Population coding requires that multiple Purkinje cells converge onto downstream targets, which is well-established in cerebellar target nuclei 68,87. In larval zebrafish, Purkinje cells involved in locomotion converge on eurydendroid cells; electrophysiological recordings confirm a many-to-one convergence scheme that could similarly support population coding 25. Vestibular-sensitive cells are located in the lateral cerebellum 39,40, which projects to hindbrain regions that contain vestibular nuclei 58. Comparing activity of vestibular nucleus neurons involved in tiltdriven behaviors 74,88,89 before/after TRPV1-mediated ablation would speak to the collective contributions of Purkinje cells.
TRPV1/capsaicin as a tool to study cerebellar contributions to behavior
Our use of TRPV1/capsaicin complements a modern suite of molecular tools to target cerebellar Purkinje cells 42. In fish, different experiments have used opsins to excite / inhibit cerebellar Purkinje cells with exceptional temporal precision, establishing functional topography 24 and an instructive role in learning 25. TRPV1/capsaicin is a well-validated approach 55 that permits parametric (i.e. dose-dependent) activation/ablation with a single transgenic line. It does not require light, facilitating dissociation of vestibular from visual contributions without requiring genetically-blind fish as in other studies using excitatory opsins 90. Finally, chemogenetic approaches such as TRPV1/capsaicin permit prolonged experimentation in freely-moving animals, allowing us to collect large kinematic datasets necessary to rigorously study posture and locomotion.
Considerable progress has been made in recent years using new tools 8,11–14 and new perspectives 91 to understand the cerebellar contributions to sensorimotor 43–46 and non-sensorimotor behaviors 47–50 in health and disease 51–53. Underlying this considerable progress is an ever-improving ability to manipulate the cerebellum without compromising rigorous measures of behavior. Here — in support of similar goals — we validated a new chemogenetic approach (TRPV1/capsaicin-mediated activation and ablation) compatible with a high-throughput paradigm to measure behavior in freely swimming larval zebrafish (SAMPL). Our data uncover expected signatures of cerebellar contributions to posture and coordination, establishing the validity of our approach. Further, by comparing the impact of Purkinje cell ablation in time, we leverage the rapid maturation of the zebrafish to open a window into cerebellar control of posture and coordination across development. Our approach establishes a path forward for the larval zebrafish model to contribute to cerebellar mechanisms of postural control. The cerebellum emerged early in the evolution of vertebrates, when vertebrate life was underwater. Our work establishes a powerful tool to investigate ancient organizing principles of cerebellar function.
Materials and methods
Fish Care
All procedures involving zebrafish larvae (Danio rerio) were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of New York University. Fertilized eggs were collected and maintained at 28.5°C on a standard 14/10 hour light/dark cycle. Before 5 dpf, larvae were maintained at densities of 20-50 larvae per petri dish of 10 cm diameter, filled with 25-40 mL E3 with 0.5 ppm methylene blue. After 5 dpf, larvae were maintained at densities under 20 larvae per petri dish and fed cultured rotifers (Reed Mariculture) daily.
Fish Lines
To generate the Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-TagRFP) line, the 5-kbp aldolase Ca (aldoca) promoter 92 and a gene cassette that includes TRPV1-Tag1RFP cDNA, rabbit beta-globin intron, and the SV40 polyadenylation signal (pAS) in pT2-4xUAS:TRPV1-RFPT 55 were subcloned into the Tol2 vector pT2KDest-RfaF 93 by the Gateway system (pT2K-aldoca-TRPV1-Tag1RFP-pAS). To establish stable transgenic lines, Tol2 plasmid and transposase mRNA (25 ng/ µl each) were injected into one-cell-stage embryos.
The resulting Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP) stable line allowed us to express the mammalian capsaicin-sensitive cation channel TRPV1 and the red fluorophore tagRFP in cerebellar Purkinje cells. Before exposure to capsaicin, fish were screened to ensure similar levels of tagRFP expression. We measured neuronal activity using a genetically-encoded calcium indicator, Tg(UAS:GCaMP6s) 78, driven by Tg(aldoca:GAL4) 94, or the Tg(elavl3:h2B-GCaMP6f) line 95.
Confocal imaging of of TRPV1-mediated activation / lesion
Images were collected using a Zeiss LSM800 confocal microscope using a 20x 1.0NA water immersion objective. Larvae were mounted in 2% low melting point agar (catalog #16520, Thermo Fisher Scientific) in a dorsal up position. Anatomical images were acquired from fish anesthetized with 0.2 mg/ml ethyl-3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester (MESAB, catalog # E10521, Sigma-Aldrich). To activate TRPV1-expressing Purkinje cells, fish were treated with 1 µM capsaicin in 0.2% DMSO in E3. To lesion Purkinje cells, fish were exposed to 10 µM capsaicin in 0.2% DMSO in E3. Control fish were treated with 0.2% DMSO in E3. Agar was removed around the tip of the tail to facilitate drug delivery. Fish were mounted throughout functional imaging experiments and kept in temperature controled incubators between timepoints. Confocal images were analyzed in Fiji 96; ROIs were drawn on nuclei of randomly selected Purkinje cells, which were then re-identified at each time point. Fluorescence for each cell and time point was normalized to the pre-capsaicin value.
To image the anatomy of Purkinje cells exposed to 10 µM of capsaicin across time, the cerebellum was imaged at 7 dpf from fish mounted as above. Fish were unmounted and kept in E3 medium until the next day (8 dpf). At 8 dpf, fish were placed in 0.2% DMSO in E3 (control) or 10 µM capsaicin in 0.2% DMSO in E3 for 40-60min, and imaged again after 1h of recovery in E3 post-treatment. Fish from both groups were imaged again at 9 dpf. Confocal images were analyzed in Fiji and Purkinje cell somata were counted in both hemispheres of the cerebellum.
Zebrafish behavior recordings
All behavior was measured using the Scalable Apparatus for Measuring Posture and Locomotion (SAMPL) apparatus, consisting of a chamber where larvae could swim freely, an infrared illuminator, a camera, and software to process video in real time. A comprehensive description of the apparatus is contained in 20. Here we briefly describe the specific details of our experiments. Larvae were transferred to chambers at densities of 3-8 fish per chamber for 7 dpf experiments or 1-4 fish per chamber for 14 dpf experiments containing 25-30 ml of E3 or 0.2% DMSO / 1 µM capsaicin for activation experiments. After 24 h, behavior recordings were paused for 30-60 minutes for feeding (feeding pause) and 1-2 ml of rotifer culture was added to each chamber. Larvae were removed from the apparatus after 48h.
To monitor behavior before/during Purkinje cell activation, 7 dpf larvae were placed in chambers with E3. At 8 & 9 dpf, control fish were placed in 0.2% DMSO in E3 and the condition fish were placed in 1 µM capsaicin in 0.2% DMSO in E3 for 6h. Video was sampled at 40Hz in constant darkness. Control: 9709 bouts (63% climb bouts)/149 fish/8 experimental repeats; Activation: 9734 bouts (61% climb bouts)/155 fish/8 experimental repeats;
To monitor behavior before/after Purkinje cell lesions, 7 dpf/14 dpf larvae were placed in the chambers with E3. After feeding at 8 dpf/15 dpf, fish were placed in petri dishes with 0.2% DMSO in E3 (control) or 10 µM capsaicin in 0.2% DMSO in E3 for 40-60min. Fish were then returned to the chambers in E3 and behavior recording was started. Video was sampled at 160Hz in constant darkness. 7 dpf lesions: Control: 17941 bouts (61% climb bouts)/110 fish/14 experimental repeats; Lesion: 17863 bouts (58% climb bouts)/120 fish/14 experimental repeats; 14 dpf lesion: Control: 10853 bouts (59% climb bouts)/48 fish/7 experimental repeats; Lesion: 10832 bouts (55% climb bouts)/44 fish/7 experimental repeats;
Pectoral fin amputations were performed at 13 dpf. Two length-matched siblings were anesthetized in 0.2 mg/ml ethyl-3-aminobenzoic acid ethyl ester (MESAB, catalog # E10521, Sigma-Aldrich) simultaneously and mounted in 2% low-melting temperature agar. Visualized under a stereomicroscope (Leica M80, 20x/12 eyepieces, 1.0x objective), the two pectoral fins from one larva were removed by pulling the base of the fin at the scapulocoracoid laterally with #5 Dumont forceps. After amputation, both fish were freed from the agar and allowed to recover in E3 until the next day, at which point half of the amputated and control fish were randomly selected for Purkinje cell lesions. Lesions were performed as above and behavior recorded for 48h. Behavior was recorded at a sampling rate of 160Hz with a 14/10h light-dark cycle. Control: 1572/5120/5354 (slow/medium/fast) bouts/15 fish/8 experimental repeats; Purkinje cell lesion: 1785/6229/4299 (slow/medium/fast) bouts/18 fish/8 experimental repeats; Fin amputation: 1938/6295/4911 (slow/medium/fast) bouts/17 fish/8 experimental repeats.
Behavior analysis
Comprehensive descriptions of behavioral kinematics and baseline data for different genetic backgrounds are detailed in 20. Here we describe the specific parameters used for our experiments. Behavior data were analyzed using custom-written software in MATLAB (Mathworks, Natick MA), which extracted individual swim bouts from the raw data (x/z position and pitch angle as a function of time). Only bouts during the circadian day were analyzed. Experimental repeats consisted of data collected across multiple SAMPL boxes from a single clutch of fish; the number of fish available determined how many apparatus were used (1-3). For comparisons across conditions (e.g. activation/control), fish from one clutch were randomly split into control and condition groups. As bout number is the fundamental unit of kinematic analysis, and different numbers of fish available would yield different numbers of bouts, we bounded our experiments to allow comparison across repeats. Specifically, if an experimental repeat contained less than 650 bouts it was excluded. Between 22-27% of lesion experimental repeats contained less than 650 bouts and were not included in the analysis. For the activation experiments 56% (10 of 18) of experimental repeats were excluded with the 650 bouts threshold due to shorter recording times a higher fraction of experiments contained less than the threshold number of bouts. In subsequent analyses, the number of analyzed bouts was matched from both groups for a given experimental repeat to ensure an identical representation of control and condition bouts. Individual bouts were aligned at the time of peak speed. Bouts were excluded if their peak speed was <5mm/s or the fish rotated more than 30°(120°/sec) during the acceleration. The fractions excluded were as follows: for 7 dpf ablation: ctrl 0.2% lesion 0.15%; 7 dpf activation: ctrl 1% activation 1.7%; 14 dpf ablation dark: ctrl 0.05% ablation 0.05%; 14 dpf ablation light: ctrl 0.02% ablation 0.02%. For each experiment between 0.02% and 1.7% of bouts were excluded based on those criteria. Data was recorded either at 40Hz (activation experiments) or 160Hz (all other experiments). Effect size was calculated as the difference between the control value and the condition value relative to the control value. For fin body slope effect size the control value of the fast bin (i.e. largest slope) was used for effect size calculations to avoid overestimation of changes due to small control values.
Kinematic analyses proceeded as in 20; key parameters were defined as follows:
Posture is the pitch angle of the fish (long axis of the body relative to the horizon) at -250ms relative to peak speed, just before swim bout initiation. Positive values are nose-up.
Upward rotation refers to the rotation from -250ms to the peak angular velocity; only bouts with positive upward rotation were included in the analysis of fin-body coordination.
Lift is the residual change in depth (z) across a bout after subtracting the change expected from the posture of the fish as detailed in 19. Briefly, the expected change is calculated using the distance the fish moves in x from -100 to 100ms and the pitch angle at -100ms. Only bouts with positive lift were included in the analysis of fin-body coordination.
Lift/rotation ratio is defined as the slope of the best linear fit between upward rotation and lift across bouts. The goodness of fit, R2 was used as a measure of how well the fins and trunk are coordinated to generate lift, after 19.
Functional GCaMP imaging in Purkinje cells
All calcium imaging experiments were performed using Tilt In Place Microscopy (TIPM), described comprehensively in 60. Briefly, 7 dpf fish were mounted in the center of the uncoated side of a mirror galvanometer (catalog #GVS0111, Thorlabs) in 2% low-melting-point agarose. E3 was placed over the agarose, and the galvanometer mirror was placed under the microscope. A microscope (Thorlabs Bergamo) was used to measure fluorescence elicited by multiphoton excitation (920nm) from a pulsed infrared laser (Mai Tai HP). Fast volumetric scanning was achieved using a piezo actuator (catalog #PFM450E, Thorlabs) to move the objective. Each frame of the volume (224 x 96 pixels) was collected with a 0.6 ms pixel dwell time (19.1 frames/s) resulting in a sampling rate of 3.82 volumes/s. While this imaging rate might be too slow to distinguish single spikes, it is suitable to measure a difference in calcium transients upon pitch stimulation to nose-up or nose-down direction.
For eccentric imaging, for each cell 21 trials were recorded at ± 30°in blocks; the order of nose-up and nose-down blocks were alternated. After all 42 trials were recorded fish were anesthetized with 0.2 mg/ml MESAB; after 10min the baseline fluorescence at ± 30°was recorded to establish a baseline that controlled for eccentricity. Analysis was done using Fiji and MATLAB. In total 43 Purkinje cells were imaged and 31 cells were kept from 8 fish. Only Purkinje cells that could be reliably identified at ±30°were analyzed.
Regions of interest were drawn in Fiji and loaded into MATLAB to extract the intensity of fluorescence after motion correction was performed 97. The integral of each stimulus was calculated and trials of the same direction were averaged as the tonic response to ± 30°pitch. To extract cells with directional information the directionality index (DI) was calculated by dividing the difference of the up and down responses by the sum of it. Cells with a DI greater than ± 0.35 were considered directionally tuned. Only Purkinje cells that were not directionally tuned were used for principal component analysis and subsequent support vector machine decoding analysis. The decoder was used with different population sizes using k-fold testing to avoid overfitting; permutations were performed on randomized data as a null hypothesis (5-fold cross-validation; 100 shuffles for randomization).
For calcium imaging in 7 and 14 dpf larvae, a horizontal imaging protocol was used. In total 11 fish were imaged at 7 dpf and 7 fish at 14 dpf. A total of 138/90 (7/14 dpf) cells were recorded. Cells were imaged while the fish was horizontal. Before each trial, a 15 sec period was recorded; the average activity during this time was used as the baseline. Fish were pitched nose-down (-19°) for 15s and rapidly returned to horizontal, whereupon calcium activity was measured. This stimulus was then repeated in the nose-up (+19°) direction. The maximum dFF of the first second upon return was analyzed. Cells were classified into directional or non-directional based on the directionality index as described above. PCA and decoder analyses were performed using activity from non-directional cells. Decoding accuracy was tested for each fish individually.
Statistics
All statistical testing was done in Matlab R2020a. Unless otherwise mentioned two-sided Wilcoxon rank sum tests were performed for measured values. For fitted variables (slope and R2 of fin body correlation) we bootstrapped the data and calculated the bootstrapped p-value. Additionally, we only considered effect sizes of ≥ 15% to be biologically relevant.
Data & Code
All data, raw and analyzed, as well as code necessary to generate the figures is available at the following DOI: 10.17605/OSF.IO/9X57Z
Acknowledgements
Tg(aldoca:TRPV1-tagRFP) fish were generated using a plasmid that was a gift from David Prober’s laboratory. Research was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders of the National Institutes of Health under award number R01DC017489. The authors would like to thank Martha Bagnall and Abigail Person along with the members of the Schoppik and Nagel lab for their valuable feedback and discussions.
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