The National Science Foundation funds a program called Next Generation Networks for Neuroscience (NeuroNex), which aims to aid the research community to study the brain. In the context of this NeuroNex initiative, we plan to develop and disseminate tools that will empower the C. elegans neuroscience community to study the connectome of C. elegans. In the first phase, our so-called technology hub will develop two sets of tools: The Hobert lab will use fluorescent-based reporter technology (
rab-3::gfp,
cla-1::gfp, GRASP) to generate a large number of transgenic C. elegans strains in which the main "edges" of the entire wiring diagram (i.e. pairwise combinations of neurons) are visualized. These strains will eventually be distributed throughout the C. elegans community to enable labs with long-standing interest in various aspects of neuronal development and function and with a focus on specific neuronal circuits and behaviors to use these synaptic labels to examine variability, development and plasticity of these connections. In parallel, the Lu lab will develop microfluidic-based and automated image analysis technologies to precisely quantify the structure of the connectome and to enable high-throughput screening of worm population for defects in synaptic wiring. Computer vision and machine learning will be used to automatically score disruptions of synaptic wiring to remove human bias and detect subtle and therefore potentially changes previously unseen.