Millisecond-timescale optical control of neural dynamics in the nonhuman primate brain.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2009
Keywords
Animals, Brain-Mapping, Gene-Expression-Regulation, Green-Fluorescent-Proteins, Lentivirus, Macaca-mulatta, Models-Animal, Neurons, Nonlinear-Dynamics, Optical-Fibers, Optics-and-Photonics, Photic-Stimulation, Rhodopsin, Time-Factors, Visual-Cortex, Visual-Pathways
First Page
191
Last Page
198
JAX Source
Neuron 2009 Apr; 62(2):191-8.
Abstract
To understand how brain states and behaviors are generated by neural circuits, it would be useful to be able to perturb precisely the activity of specific cell types and pathways in the nonhuman primate nervous system. We used lentivirus to target the light-activated cation channel channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) specifically to excitatory neurons of the macaque frontal cortex. Using a laser-coupled optical fiber in conjunction with a recording microelectrode, we showed that activation of excitatory neurons resulted in well-timed excitatory and suppressive influences on neocortical neural networks. ChR2 was safely expressed, and could mediate optical neuromodulation, in primate neocortex over many months. These findings highlight a methodology for investigating the causal role of specific cell types in nonhuman primate neural computation, cognition, and behavior, and open up the possibility of a new generation of ultraprecise neurological and psychiatric therapeutics via cell-type-specific optical neural control prosthetics.
Recommended Citation
Han X,
Qian X,
Bernstein JG,
Zhou HH,
Franzesi GT,
Stern P,
Bronson RT,
Graybiel AM,
Desimone R,
Boyden ES.
Millisecond-timescale optical control of neural dynamics in the nonhuman primate brain. Neuron 2009 Apr; 62(2):191-8.