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Published November 2005 | public
Journal Article

Anatomical analysis of an aye-aye brain (Daubentonia madagascariensis, primates: Prosimii) combining histology, structural magnetic resonance imaging, and diffusion-tensor imaging

Abstract

This report presents initial results of a multimodal analysis of tissue volume and microstructure in the brain of an aye‐aye (Daubentonia madagascariensis ). The left hemisphere of an aye‐aye brain was scanned using T2‐weighted structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion‐tensor imaging (DTI) prior to histological processing and staining for Nissl substance and myelinated fibers. The objectives of the experiment were to estimate the volume of gross brain regions for comparison with published data on other prosimians and to validate DTI data on fiber anisotropy with histological measurements of fiber spread. Measurements of brain structure volumes in the specimen are consistent with those reported in the literature: the aye‐aye has a very large brain for its body size, a reduced volume of visual structures (V1 and LGN), and an increased volume of the olfactory lobe. This trade‐off between visual and olfactory reliance is likely a reflection of the nocturnal extractive foraging behavior practiced by Daubentonia . Additionally, frontal cortex volume is large in the aye‐aye, a feature that may also be related to its complex foraging behavior and sensorimotor demands. Analysis of DTI data in the anterior cingulum bundle demonstrates a strong correlation between fiber spread as measured from histological sections and fiber spread as measured from DTI. These results represent the first quantitative comparison of DTI data and fiber‐stained histology in the brain.

Additional Information

© 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. Issue Online: 25 October 2005. Version of Record online: 07 October 2005. Manuscript accepted: 17 August 2005. Manuscript received: 16 August 2005. The authors thank the Duke University Primate Center for providing the aye-aye brain and Virginie Goubert for expert assistance with histological preparation. Supported by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation (to J.M.A.), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (to J.M.A.), the National Science Foundation (CCR-0086065 to D.H.L.), and the National Institutes of Health (RO1-EB003453, P41-EB001977, and P50-ES049617 to E.T.A.).

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023