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Nat Biomed Eng
Published

Closed-loop optogenetic control of the dynamics of neural activity in non-human primates.

Authors

B Zaaimi, M Turnbull, A Hazra, Y Wang, C Gandara, F McLeod, E E McDermott, E Escobedo-Cousin, A Shah Idil, R G Bailey, S Tardio, A Patel, N Ponon, J Gausden, D Walsh, F Hutchings, M Kaiser, M O Cunningham, G J Clowry, F E N LeBeau, T G Constandinou, S N Baker, N Donaldson, P Degenaar, A O'Neill, A J Trevelyan, A Jackson

Abstract

Electrical neurostimulation is effective in the treatment of neurological disorders, but associated recording artefacts generally limit its applications to open-loop stimuli. Real-time and continuous closed-loop control of brain activity can, however, be achieved by pairing concurrent electrical recordings and optogenetics. Here we show that closed-loop optogenetic stimulation with excitatory opsins enables the precise manipulation of neural dynamics in brain slices from transgenic mice and in anaesthetized non-human primates. The approach generates oscillations in quiescent tissue, enhances or suppresses endogenous patterns in active tissue and modulates seizure-like bursts elicited by the convulsant 4-aminopyridine. A nonlinear model of the phase-dependent effects of optical stimulation reproduced the modulation of cycles of local-field potentials associated with seizure oscillations, as evidenced by the systematic changes in the variability and entropy of the phase-space trajectories of seizures, which correlated with changes in their duration and intensity. We also show that closed-loop optogenetic neurostimulation could be delivered using intracortical optrodes incorporating light-emitting diodes. Closed-loop optogenetic approaches may be translatable to therapeutic applications in humans.

PMID:36266536 | DOI:

UK DRI Authors

Danny Wang

Prof Danny Wang

Professor of Neurology and Radiology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California

Prof Danny Wang
Jo Jackson

Dr Johanna Jackson

Emerging Leader

Investigating synaptic vulnerability in Alzheimer's

Dr Johanna Jackson