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Lasers Induce Gamma
Brain Waves in Mice
April 27, 2009
Scientists
have studied high-frequency brain waves, known as gamma oscillations,
for more than 50 years, believing them crucial to consciousness,
attention, learning and memory. Now, for the first time, MIT researchers
and colleagues have found a way to induce these waves by shining laser
light directly onto the brains of mice.
The work takes advantage of a newly developed technology known as
optogenetics, which combines genetic engineering with light to
manipulate the activity of individual nerve cells. The research helps
explain how the brain produces gamma waves and provides new evidence of
the role they play in regulating brain functions -- insights that could
someday lead to new treatments for a range of brain-related disorders.
"Gamma waves are known to be [disrupted] in people with schizophrenia
and other psychiatric and neurological diseases," says Li-Huei Tsai,
Picower Professor of Neuroscience and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator. "This new tool will give us a great chance to probe the
function of these circuits."
Tsai co-authored a paper about the work that appears in the April 26
online issue of Nature.
Gamma oscillations reflect the synchronous activity of large
interconnected networks of neurons, firing together at frequencies
ranging from 20 to 80 cycles per second. "These oscillations are thought
to be controlled by a specific class of inhibitory cells known as
fast-spiking interneurons," says Jessica Cardin, co-lead author on the
study and a postdoctoral fellow at MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain
Research. "But until now, a direct test of this idea was not possible."
To determine which neurons are responsible for driving the oscillations,
the researchers used a protein called channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2), which
can sensitize neurons to light. "By combining several genetic tricks, we
were able to express ChR2 in different classes of neurons, allowing us
to manipulate their activity with precise timing via a laser and an
optical fiber over the brain," explains co-lead author Marie Carlén, a
postdoctoral fellow at the Picower Institute.
The trick for inducing gamma waves was the selective activation of the
"fast-spiking" interneurons, named for their characteristic pattern of
electrical activity. When these cells were driven with high frequency
laser pulses, the illuminated region of cortex started to produce gamma
oscillations. "We've shown for the first time that it is possible to
induce a specific brain state by activating a specific cell type" says
co-author Christopher Moore, associate professor of neuroscience and an
investigator in the McGovern Institute. In contrast, no gamma
oscillations were induced when the fast-spiking interneurons were
activated at low frequencies, or when a different class of neurons was
activated.
The
authors further showed that these brain rhythms regulate the processing
of sensory signals. They found that the brain's response to a tactile
stimulus was greater or smaller depending on exactly where the stimulus
occurred within the oscillation cycle. "It supports the idea that these
synchronous oscillations are important for controlling how we perceive
stimuli," says Moore. "Gamma rhythms might serve to make a sound louder,
or a visual input brighter, all based on how these patterns regulate
brain circuits."
Because this new approach required a merger of expertise from
neuroscience and molecular genetics, three different laboratories
contributed to its completion. In addition to Tsai, Moore and Carlén of
MIT, co-authors include Jessica Cardin, research affiliate at the
McGovern Institute and the University of Pennsylvania, and Karl
Deisseroth and Feng Zhang at Stanford University. Other co-authors were
Konstantinos Meletis, a postdoctoral fellow at the Picower Institute,
and Ulf Knoblich, a graduate student in MIT's Department of Brain and
Cognitive Sciences.
This work was supported by NARSAD, the National Institutes of Health,
the National Science Foundation, the Thomas F. Peterson fund, the Simons
Foundation Autism Research Initiative and the Knut and Alice Wallenberg
Foundation. |