
Artist concept of neural circuits in the brain. Research from the laboratory of Mikhail Shapiro is showing how neural circuits can be controlled without the need for invasive procedures.
Credit: Maayan Harel for Caltech
New noninvasive technique for precisely controlling brain circuits could one day help treat neurological conditions.
In the maze of our brains, there are various pathways by which neural signals travel. These pathways can go awry in patients with neurological and psychiatric diseases and disorders, including epilepsy, Parkinson’s, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Researchers have developed new therapeutic strategies to more precisely target neural pathways involved in these conditions, but they often require surgery.
The latest findings from the laboratory of Mikhail Shapiro, assistant professor of chemical engineering and an affiliated faculty member of the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience at Caltech, are now showing how scientists and doctors might, in the future, selectively turn neural circuits on and off—without the need for surgery. The new study, featured in the July 9 online edition of Nature Biomedical Engineering, demonstrates how the method—which involves a trio of therapies: ultrasound waves, gene therapy, and synthetic drugs—can be used to specifically alter memory formation in mice.
“By using sound waves and known genetic techniques, we can, for the first time, noninvasively control specific brain regions and cell types as well as the timing of when neurons are switched on or off,” says Shapiro, who is also a Schlinger Scholar and a Heritage Medical Research Institute Investigator. The work has implications for basic research in animals and for the future treatment of neurological and psychiatric conditions.
While the idea of fine-tuning neural circuits is not new—for instance, in a growing field called optogenetics, light is used to control brain regions via implanted optical fibers—the novel aspect of Shapiro’s method is sound waves. Shapiro’s lab has previously used sound waves to image and control the function of engineered cells inside the body.
In the new study, the sound waves are used in combination with small bubbles injected into the blood to temporarily open the blood-brain barrier—a protective layer that prevents substances in the blood, particularly those that could be harmful, from getting into the brain.
“When the bubbles are hit with ultrasound waves, they vibrate, and this motion jostles the blood-brain barrier open for a brief period of time,” says Jerzy Szablowski, lead author of the new study and a postdoctoral scholar in Shapiro’s lab.
The temporary opening of the blood-brain barrier is the first step in the new three-pronged strategy for controlling neural circuits. With the blood-brain barrier open in the region targeted by ultrasound, the team can then use gene therapy. A virus is delivered into the blood, it passes the blood-brain barrier, and then delivers genetic instructions to the desired cells. These genetic instructions code for proteins, called chemogenetic receptors, which have been designed to respond to a certain lab-made drug.
The final step in the process is to administer the drug and turn the specific neurons on or off.
In the new study, the researchers demonstrated the technique by targeting memory-forming neurons in mice, located in a part of the brain called the hippocampus. When the mice were given the chemogenetic drug, these neurons were turned off, and, as a result, the mice were temporarily unable to form new memories.
Because the Shapiro lab’s new technique combines chemogenetics with ultrasound, the team has dubbed it “acoustically targeted chemogenetics,” or ATAC.
“This is an impressive, innovative approach that will be useful for many neuroscientists,” says pharmacology professor Bryan Roth of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the inventor of some of the first chemogenetic proteins, who was not involved in the study.
“Our method is a combination of technologies, each of which have been used in animals and are being advanced into the clinic,” says Shapiro. “Because of this, we are further along in our development process than we would be if we started from scratch.”
The researchers say they hope to continue testing in animals with models of diseases such as epilepsy. Many patients with epilepsy currently undergo surgery to cut out the regions of their brain where seizures are thought to be triggered. With the ATAC method, specific brain areas could, in theory, be switched off temporarily without surgery.
“This method is reversible,” says Szablowski. “You can administer a drug to turn off neural cells of interest, but, with time, those cells will turn back on. You can also perform drug dosing to determine how completely you are shutting off that region of the brain.”
Learn more: Switching Brain Circuits On and Off Without Surgery
The Latest on: Neural circuits
via Google News
The Latest on: Neural circuits
- AI and the Virtuous Cycle of Unprecedented Data Managementon January 27, 2021 at 12:23 am
Need for Neural Networks Fast forward to today ... A rough comparison would be an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) versus a digital circuit that’s based on fixed thresholds. The other half of the ...
- Uncovers the molecular mechanism behind synapse loss in Alzheimer's diseaseon January 26, 2021 at 12:29 pm
Molecular mechanisms of synaptic damage can point way to new treatment approaches Korea Brain Research Institute (KBRI, Pann-Ghill Suh (President)) announced that Dr. Kea Joo Lee and Dr. You-Na Jang ...
- Wirelessly rechargeable soft brain implant controls brain cellson January 26, 2021 at 9:14 am
Researchers have invented a smartphone-controlled soft brain implant that can be recharged wirelessly from outside the body. It enables long-term neural circuit manipulation without the need for ...
- Eero Simoncelli Leads New Center for Computational Neuroscienceon January 26, 2021 at 7:14 am
The Simons Foundation is delighted to announce the launch of the (CCN) within the foundation’s Flatiron Institute in New York City. The new center, led by computational neuroscientist Eero Simoncelli, ...
- Tirin Moore awarded NAS Pradel Research Awardon January 25, 2021 at 4:09 pm
Tirin Moore, professor of neurobiology in the School of Medicine, is the recipient of the 2021 Pradel Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). The Pradel Research Award recognizes ...
- Efficient brain circuitry develops spontaneously: Studyon January 24, 2021 at 10:48 am
A new study has shown that showing that the topographic tiling of cortical maps originates from bottom-up projections from the periphery efficient brain circui ...
- Brain ‘assembloids’ capture circuit flaws in syndrome tied to autismon January 21, 2021 at 4:02 am
Merging 3D clusters of neurons that mimic different brain regions models the atypical electrical activity seen in an autism-related condition.
- 3D high-density microelectrode array with optical stimulation and drug delivery for investigating neural circuit dynamicson January 20, 2021 at 4:00 pm
Currently technologies for monitoring and controlling neural activities in 3D models are lacking. Here the authors report a 3D high-density multielectrode array, with optical stimulation and drug ...
- How to reroute a broken neural circuiton January 19, 2021 at 8:25 am
How animals turn sense into perception is a magical mystery. To better understand this fundamental process, scientists are using simple nematode worms to break and repair odor-sensing neural circuits ...
via Bing News