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Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact

Optogenetic techniques are used widely to perturb and interrogate neural circuits in behaving animals, but illumination can have additional effects, such as the activation of endogenous opsins in the retina. We found that illumination, delivered deep into the brain via an optical fiber, evoked a beh...

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Autores principales: Danskin, Bethanny, Denman, Daniel, Valley, Matthew, Ollerenshaw, Douglas, Williams, Derric, Groblewski, Peter, Reid, Clay, Olsen, Shawn, Waters, Jack
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4686123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26657323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144760
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author Danskin, Bethanny
Denman, Daniel
Valley, Matthew
Ollerenshaw, Douglas
Williams, Derric
Groblewski, Peter
Reid, Clay
Olsen, Shawn
Waters, Jack
author_facet Danskin, Bethanny
Denman, Daniel
Valley, Matthew
Ollerenshaw, Douglas
Williams, Derric
Groblewski, Peter
Reid, Clay
Olsen, Shawn
Waters, Jack
author_sort Danskin, Bethanny
collection PubMed
description Optogenetic techniques are used widely to perturb and interrogate neural circuits in behaving animals, but illumination can have additional effects, such as the activation of endogenous opsins in the retina. We found that illumination, delivered deep into the brain via an optical fiber, evoked a behavioral artifact in mice performing a visually guided discrimination task. Compared with blue (473 nm) and yellow (589 nm) illumination, red (640 nm) illumination evoked a greater behavioral artifact and more activity in the retina, the latter measured with electrical recordings. In the mouse, the sensitivity of retinal opsins declines steeply with wavelength across the visible spectrum, but propagation of light through brain tissue increases with wavelength. Our results suggest that poor retinal sensitivity to red light was overcome by relatively robust propagation of red light through brain tissue and stronger illumination of the retina by red than by blue or yellow light. Light adaptation of the retina, via an external source of illumination, suppressed retinal activation and the behavioral artifact without otherwise impacting behavioral performance. In summary, long wavelength optogenetic stimuli are particularly prone to evoke behavioral artifacts via activation of retinal opsins in the mouse, but light adaptation of the retina can provide a simple and effective mitigation of the artifact.
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spelling pubmed-46861232016-01-07 Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact Danskin, Bethanny Denman, Daniel Valley, Matthew Ollerenshaw, Douglas Williams, Derric Groblewski, Peter Reid, Clay Olsen, Shawn Waters, Jack PLoS One Research Article Optogenetic techniques are used widely to perturb and interrogate neural circuits in behaving animals, but illumination can have additional effects, such as the activation of endogenous opsins in the retina. We found that illumination, delivered deep into the brain via an optical fiber, evoked a behavioral artifact in mice performing a visually guided discrimination task. Compared with blue (473 nm) and yellow (589 nm) illumination, red (640 nm) illumination evoked a greater behavioral artifact and more activity in the retina, the latter measured with electrical recordings. In the mouse, the sensitivity of retinal opsins declines steeply with wavelength across the visible spectrum, but propagation of light through brain tissue increases with wavelength. Our results suggest that poor retinal sensitivity to red light was overcome by relatively robust propagation of red light through brain tissue and stronger illumination of the retina by red than by blue or yellow light. Light adaptation of the retina, via an external source of illumination, suppressed retinal activation and the behavioral artifact without otherwise impacting behavioral performance. In summary, long wavelength optogenetic stimuli are particularly prone to evoke behavioral artifacts via activation of retinal opsins in the mouse, but light adaptation of the retina can provide a simple and effective mitigation of the artifact. Public Library of Science 2015-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4686123/ /pubmed/26657323 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144760 Text en © 2015 Danskin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Danskin, Bethanny
Denman, Daniel
Valley, Matthew
Ollerenshaw, Douglas
Williams, Derric
Groblewski, Peter
Reid, Clay
Olsen, Shawn
Waters, Jack
Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title_full Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title_fullStr Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title_full_unstemmed Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title_short Optogenetics in Mice Performing a Visual Discrimination Task: Measurement and Suppression of Retinal Activation and the Resulting Behavioral Artifact
title_sort optogenetics in mice performing a visual discrimination task: measurement and suppression of retinal activation and the resulting behavioral artifact
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4686123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26657323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144760
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