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Dive into the research topics where Jean-François Léger is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-François Léger.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2006

Ultrafast random-access scanning in two-photon microscopy using acousto-optic deflectors

R. Salomé; Yves Kremer; Stéphane Dieudonné; Jean-François Léger; Oleg Krichevsky; C. Wyart; D. Chatenay; Laurent Bourdieu

Two-photon scanning microscopy (TPSM) is a powerful tool for imaging deep inside living tissues with sub-cellular resolution. The temporal resolution of TPSM is however strongly limited by the galvanometric mirrors used to steer the laser beam. Fast physiological events can therefore only be followed by scanning repeatedly a single line within the field of view. Because acousto-optic deflectors (AODs) are non-mechanical devices, they allow access at any point within the field of view on a microsecond time scale and are therefore excellent candidates to improve the temporal resolution of TPSM. However, the use of AOD-based scanners with femtosecond pulses raises several technical difficulties. In this paper, we describe an all-digital TPSM setup based on two crossed AODs. It includes in particular an acousto-optic modulator (AOM) placed at 45 degrees with respect to the AODs to pre-compensate for the large spatial distortions of femtosecond pulses occurring in the AODs, in order to optimize the spatial resolution and the fluorescence excitation. Our setup allows recording from freely selectable point-of-interest at high speed (1kHz). By maximizing the time spent on points of interest, random-access TPSM (RA-TPSM) constitutes a promising method for multiunit recordings with millisecond resolution in biological tissues.


European Physical Journal E | 2003

Probing complex RNA structures by mechanical force

S. Harlepp; Marchal T; Julien Robert; Jean-François Léger; Xayaphoummine A; H. Isambert; Didier Chatenay

Abstract.RNA secondary structures of increasing complexity are probed combining single molecule stretching experiments and stochastic unfolding/refolding simulations. We find that force-induced unfolding pathways cannot usually be interpreted by solely invoking successive openings of native helices. Indeed, typical force-extension responses of complex RNA molecules are largely shaped by stretching-induced, long-lived intermediates including non-native helices. This is first shown for a set of generic structural motifs found in larger RNA structures, and then for Escherichia coli’s 1540-base long 16S ribosomal RNA, which exhibits a surprisingly well-structured and reproducible unfolding pathway under mechanical stretching. Using out-of-equilibrium stochastic simulations, we demonstrate that these experimental results reflect the slow relaxation of RNA structural rearrangements. Hence, micromanipulations of single RNA molecules probe both their native structures and long-lived intermediates, so-called “kinetic traps”, thereby capturing -at the single molecular level- the hallmark of RNA folding/unfolding dynamics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Calcium rubies: a family of red-emitting functionalizable indicators suitable for two-photon Ca2+ imaging.

Mayeul Collot; Christina Loukou; Aleksey Yakovlev; Christian Wilms; Dongdong Li; Alexis Evrard; Alsu I. Zamaleeva; Laurent Bourdieu; Jean-François Léger; Nicole Ropert; Jens Eilers; Martin Oheim; Anne Feltz; Jean-Maurice Mallet

We designed Calcium Rubies, a family of functionalizable BAPTA-based red-fluorescent calcium (Ca(2+)) indicators as new tools for biological Ca(2+) imaging. The specificity of this Ca(2+)-indicator family is its side arm, attached on the ethylene glycol bridge that allows coupling the indicator to various groups while leaving open the possibility of aromatic substitutions on the BAPTA core for tuning the Ca(2+)-binding affinity. Using this possibility we now synthesize and characterize three different CaRubies with affinities between 3 and 22 μM. Their long excitation and emission wavelengths (peaks at 586/604 nm) allow their use in otherwise challenging multicolor experiments, e.g., when combining Ca(2+) uncaging or optogenetic stimulation with Ca(2+) imaging in cells expressing fluorescent proteins. We illustrate this capacity by the detection of Ca(2+) transients evoked by blue light in cultured astrocytes expressing CatCh, a light-sensitive Ca(2+)-translocating channelrhodopsin linked to yellow fluorescent protein. Using time-correlated single-photon counting, we measured fluorescence lifetimes for all CaRubies and demonstrate a 10-fold increase in the average lifetime upon Ca(2+) chelation. Since only the fluorescence quantum yield but not the absorbance of the CaRubies is Ca(2+)-dependent, calibrated two-photon fluorescence excitation measurements of absolute Ca(2+) concentrations are feasible.


Epilepsia | 2003

Single-unit Analysis of Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata Neurons in Freely Behaving Rats with Genetic Absence Epilepsy

Colin Deransart; Bernhard Hellwig; Miriam Heupel-Reuter; Jean-François Léger; Detlef Heck; Carl Hermann Lücking

Summary:  Purpose: The substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNpr) is assumed to be involved in the control of several kinds of epileptic seizures, an assumption based mostly on neuropharmacologic evidence. However, only very few neurophysiological recordings from the basal ganglia support neuropharmacologic data. We investigated the electrophysiologic activity of SNpr neurons in rats with genetic absence epilepsy.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Late Emergence of the Vibrissa Direction Selectivity Map in the Rat Barrel Cortex

Yves Kremer; Jean-François Léger; Dan F. M. Goodman; Romain Brette; Laurent Bourdieu

In the neocortex, neuronal selectivities for multiple sensorimotor modalities are often distributed in topographical maps thought to emerge during a restricted period in early postnatal development. Rodent barrel cortex contains a somatotopic map for vibrissa identity, but the existence of maps representing other tactile features has not been clearly demonstrated. We addressed the issue of the existence in the rat cortex of an intrabarrel map for vibrissa movement direction using in vivo two-photon imaging. We discovered that the emergence of a direction map in rat barrel cortex occurs long after all known critical periods in the somatosensory system. This map is remarkably specific, taking a pinwheel-like form centered near the barrel center and aligned to the barrel cortex somatotopy. We suggest that this map may arise from intracortical mechanisms and demonstrate by simulation that the combination of spike-timing-dependent plasticity at synapses between layer 4 and layer 2/3 and realistic pad stimulation is sufficient to produce such a map. Its late emergence long after other classical maps suggests that experience-dependent map formation and refinement continue throughout adult life.


Optics Express | 2008

A spatio-temporally compensated acousto-optic scanner for two-photon microscopy providing large field of view.

Yves Kremer; Jean-François Léger; R. Lapole; N. Honnorat; Y. Candela; Stéphane Dieudonné; Laurent Bourdieu

Acousto-optic deflectors (AOD) are promising ultrafast scanners for non-linear microscopy. Their use has been limited until now by their small scanning range and by the spatial and temporal dispersions of the laser beam going through the deflectors. We show that the use of AOD of large aperture (13mm) compared to standard deflectors allows accessing much larger field of view while minimizing spatio-temporal distortions. An acousto-optic modulator (AOM) placed at distance of the AOD is used to compensate spatial and temporal dispersions. Fine tuning of the AOM-AOD setup using a frequency-resolved optical gating (GRENOUILLE) allows elimination of pulse front tilt whereas spatial chirp is minimized thanks to the large aperture AOD.


Biomedical Optics Express | 2012

Measuring aberrations in the rat brain by coherence-gated wavefront sensing using a Linnik interferometer

Jinyu Wang; Jean-François Léger; Jonas Binding; A. Claude Boccara; Sylvain Gigan; Laurent Bourdieu

Aberrations limit the resolution, signal intensity and achievable imaging depth in microscopy. Coherence-gated wavefront sensing (CGWS) allows the fast measurement of aberrations in scattering samples and therefore the implementation of adaptive corrections. However, CGWS has been demonstrated so far only in weakly scattering samples. We designed a new CGWS scheme based on a Linnik interferometer and a SLED light source, which is able to compensate dispersion automatically and can be implemented on any microscope. In the highly scattering rat brain tissue, where multiply scattered photons falling within the temporal gate of the CGWS can no longer be neglected, we have measured known defocus and spherical aberrations up to a depth of 400 µm.


Optics Express | 2015

Fast spatial beam shaping by acousto-optic diffraction for 3D non-linear microscopy.

Walther Akemann; Jean-François Léger; Cathie Ventalon; Benjamin Mathieu; Stéphane Dieudonné; Laurent Bourdieu

Acousto-optic deflection (AOD) devices offer unprecedented fast control of the entire spatial structure of light beams, most notably their phase. AOD light modulation of ultra-short laser pulses, however, is not straightforward to implement because of intrinsic chromatic dispersion and non-stationarity of acousto-optic diffraction. While schemes exist to compensate chromatic dispersion, non-stationarity remains an obstacle. In this work we demonstrate an efficient AOD light modulator for stable phase modulation using time-locked generation of frequency-modulated acoustic waves at the full repetition rate of a high power laser pulse amplifier of 80 kHz. We establish the non-local relationship between the optical phase and the generating acoustic frequency function and verify the system for temporal stability, phase accuracy and generation of non-linear two-dimensional phase functions.


Nature Communications | 2016

A radial map of multi-whisker correlation selectivity in the rat barrel cortex

Luc Estebanez; Julien Bertherat; Daniel E. Shulz; Laurent Bourdieu; Jean-François Léger

In the barrel cortex, several features of single-whisker stimuli are organized in functional maps. The barrel cortex also encodes spatio-temporal correlation patterns of multi-whisker inputs, but so far the cortical mapping of neurons tuned to such input statistics is unknown. Here we report that layer 2/3 of the rat barrel cortex contains an additional functional map based on neuronal tuning to correlated versus uncorrelated multi-whisker stimuli: neuron responses to uncorrelated multi-whisker stimulation are strongest above barrel centres, whereas neuron responses to correlated and anti-correlated multi-whisker stimulation peak above the barrel–septal borders, forming rings of multi-whisker synchrony-preferring cells.


SPIE Technologies and Applications of Structured Light | 2017

Ultra-fast 3D scanning and holographic illumination in non-linear microscopy using acousto-optic deflectors

Walther Akemann; Cathie Ventalon; Jean-François Léger; Benjamin Mathieu; Stéphane Dieudonné; Baptiste Blochet; Sylvain Gigan; Laurent Bourdieu

Decoding of information in the brain requires the imaging of large neuronal networks using e.g. two-photon microscopy (TPM). Fast control of the focus in 3D can be achieved with phase shaping of the light beam using acoustooptic deflectors (AODs). However, beam shaping using AODs is not straightforward because of non-stationary of acousto-optic diffraction. Here, we demonstrated a new stable AOD-based phase modulator, which operates at a rate of up to about hundred kHz. It provides opportunity for 3D scanning in TPM with the possibility to correct aberrations independently for every focus position or to achieve refocusing of scattered photons in rapidly decorrelating tissues.

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Dive into the Jean-François Léger's collaboration.

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Laurent Bourdieu

École Normale Supérieure

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Didier Chatenay

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Yves Kremer

École Normale Supérieure

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Jinyu Wang

École Normale Supérieure

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Benjamin Mathieu

École Normale Supérieure

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