Back

A multi-resolution imaging and analysis pipeline for comparative circuit reconstruction in insects

Gillet, V.; Sayre, M. E.; Badalamente, G.; Schieber, N. L.; Tedore, K.; Funke, J.; Heinze, S.

2026-02-28 neuroscience
10.64898/2026.02.25.708065 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Connectomics has become essential for the study of brain function, yet for most research groups it remains prohibitively costly in imaging time, data storage, and analysis. Here, we present an imaging, processing, and analysis pipeline for multi-resolution image acquisition and circuit reconstruction. Applied to the central complex of six insect species, we were able to obtain global projectomes at cellular resolution (40-50 nm) with embedded local connectomes describing key computational compartments at synaptic resolution (8-12 nm). We provide standardized protocols for volume EM sample preparation, image acquisition and image alignment, combined with existing methods for {micro}CT block trimming, automatic segmentation, synapse detection, collaborative skeleton tracing with CATMAID, and segmentation proofreading via CAVE. We validated our workflow by reconstructing head direction cells across all six insect species, which revealed deep conservation at the level of cell types, cell numbers and projection patterns, while also revealing circuit level specializations. Overall, our pipeline democratizes comparative connectomics by making this method accessible for small research groups with modest resources.

Matching journals

The top 3 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.