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Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits

Connecting neural circuit output to behaviour can be facilitated by precise chemical manipulation of specific cell populations(1,2). Engineered receptors exclusively activated by designer small molecules enable manipulation of specific neural pathways(3,4). Their application to studies of behaviour...

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Autores principales: Rao, Siyuan, Chen, Ritchie, LaRocca, Ava A., Christiansen, Michael G., Senko, Alexander W., Shi, Cindy H., Chiang, Po-Han, Varnavides, Georgios, Xue, Jian, Zhou, Yang, Park, Seongjun, Ding, Ruihua, Moon, Junsang, Feng, Guoping, Anikeeva, Polina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6778020/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31427746
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41565-019-0521-z
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author Rao, Siyuan
Chen, Ritchie
LaRocca, Ava A.
Christiansen, Michael G.
Senko, Alexander W.
Shi, Cindy H.
Chiang, Po-Han
Varnavides, Georgios
Xue, Jian
Zhou, Yang
Park, Seongjun
Ding, Ruihua
Moon, Junsang
Feng, Guoping
Anikeeva, Polina
author_facet Rao, Siyuan
Chen, Ritchie
LaRocca, Ava A.
Christiansen, Michael G.
Senko, Alexander W.
Shi, Cindy H.
Chiang, Po-Han
Varnavides, Georgios
Xue, Jian
Zhou, Yang
Park, Seongjun
Ding, Ruihua
Moon, Junsang
Feng, Guoping
Anikeeva, Polina
author_sort Rao, Siyuan
collection PubMed
description Connecting neural circuit output to behaviour can be facilitated by precise chemical manipulation of specific cell populations(1,2). Engineered receptors exclusively activated by designer small molecules enable manipulation of specific neural pathways(3,4). Their application to studies of behaviour has thus far been hampered by a trade-off between low temporal resolution of systemic injection versus invasiveness of implanted cannulas or infusion pumps(2). Here, we develop remotely controlled chemomagnetic modulation – a nanomaterials-based technique that permits pharmacological interrogation of targeted neural populations in freely moving subjects. The heat dissipated by magnetic nanoparticles in the presence of alternating magnetic fields triggers small molecule release from thermally sensitive lipid vesicles with 20 s latency. Coupled with chemogenetic activation of engineered receptors, this technique permits the control of specific neurons with temporal and spatial precision. Delivery of chemomagnetic particles to the ventral tegmental area allows remote modulation of motivated behaviour in mice. Furthermore, this chemomagnetic approach activates endogenous circuits by enabling regulated release of receptor ligands. Applied to an endogenous dopamine receptor D1 agonist in the nucleus accumbens, a brain area involved in mediating social interactions, chemomagnetic modulation increases sociability in mice. By offering temporally precise control of specified ligand-receptor interactions in neurons, this approach may facilitate molecular neuroscience studies in behaving organisms.
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spelling pubmed-67780202020-02-19 Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits Rao, Siyuan Chen, Ritchie LaRocca, Ava A. Christiansen, Michael G. Senko, Alexander W. Shi, Cindy H. Chiang, Po-Han Varnavides, Georgios Xue, Jian Zhou, Yang Park, Seongjun Ding, Ruihua Moon, Junsang Feng, Guoping Anikeeva, Polina Nat Nanotechnol Article Connecting neural circuit output to behaviour can be facilitated by precise chemical manipulation of specific cell populations(1,2). Engineered receptors exclusively activated by designer small molecules enable manipulation of specific neural pathways(3,4). Their application to studies of behaviour has thus far been hampered by a trade-off between low temporal resolution of systemic injection versus invasiveness of implanted cannulas or infusion pumps(2). Here, we develop remotely controlled chemomagnetic modulation – a nanomaterials-based technique that permits pharmacological interrogation of targeted neural populations in freely moving subjects. The heat dissipated by magnetic nanoparticles in the presence of alternating magnetic fields triggers small molecule release from thermally sensitive lipid vesicles with 20 s latency. Coupled with chemogenetic activation of engineered receptors, this technique permits the control of specific neurons with temporal and spatial precision. Delivery of chemomagnetic particles to the ventral tegmental area allows remote modulation of motivated behaviour in mice. Furthermore, this chemomagnetic approach activates endogenous circuits by enabling regulated release of receptor ligands. Applied to an endogenous dopamine receptor D1 agonist in the nucleus accumbens, a brain area involved in mediating social interactions, chemomagnetic modulation increases sociability in mice. By offering temporally precise control of specified ligand-receptor interactions in neurons, this approach may facilitate molecular neuroscience studies in behaving organisms. 2019-08-19 2019-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6778020/ /pubmed/31427746 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41565-019-0521-z Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Rao, Siyuan
Chen, Ritchie
LaRocca, Ava A.
Christiansen, Michael G.
Senko, Alexander W.
Shi, Cindy H.
Chiang, Po-Han
Varnavides, Georgios
Xue, Jian
Zhou, Yang
Park, Seongjun
Ding, Ruihua
Moon, Junsang
Feng, Guoping
Anikeeva, Polina
Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title_full Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title_fullStr Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title_full_unstemmed Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title_short Remotely Controlled Chemomagnetic Modulation of Targeted Neural Circuits
title_sort remotely controlled chemomagnetic modulation of targeted neural circuits
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6778020/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31427746
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41565-019-0521-z
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