The images acquired using this technique allowed the team to see how nerve cells connect in the mouse brain, without needing to thinly slice biological tissue samples.
Volume electron microscopy (volume EM) has been the gold standard for imaging how nerve cells connect as ‘”circuitry” inside the brain. It has paved the way for scientists to create maps called connectomes, of entire brains, first in fruit fly larvae and then the adult fruit fly. This imaging involves cutting 10s of nm thin slices (tens of thousands per mm of tissue), imaging each slice and then building the images back into their 3D structure.
Compared to electrons, X-rays have the potential to penetrate deeper into the matter, so the team set out to investigate if this type of imaging would be suitable for capturing the fine details of nerve cells in tissue, without the need to slice the sample.