Ultrasound modulates neuronal potassium currents via ionotropic glutamate receptors.
Authors: Clennell B, Steward TGJ, Hanman K, Needham T, Benachour J, Jepson M, Elley M, Halford N, Heesom K, Shin E, Molnár E, Drinkwater BW, Whitcomb DJ
Focused ultrasound stimulation (FUS) has the potential to provide non-invasive neuromodulation of deep brain regions with unparalleled spatial precision. However, the cellular and molecular consequences of ultrasound stimulation on neurons remains poorly understood. We previously reported that ultrasound stimulation induces increases in neuronal excitability that persist for hours following stimulation in vitro. In the present study we sought to further elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which ultrasound regulates neuronal excitability and synaptic function. To determine the effect of ultrasound stimulation on voltage-gated ion channel function and synaptic plasticity. Primary rat cortical neurons were exposed to a 40 s, 200 kHz pulsed ultrasound stimulus or sham-stimulus. Whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology, quantitative proteomics and high-resolution confocal microscopy were employed to determine the effects of ultrasound stimulation on molecular regulators of neuronal excitability and synaptic function. We find that ultrasound exposure elicits sustained but reversible increases in whole-cell potassium currents. In addition, we find that ultrasound exposure activates synaptic signalling cascades that result in marked increases in excitatory synaptic transmission. Finally, we demonstrate the requirement of ionotropic glutamate receptor (AMPAR/NMDAR) activation for ultrasound-induced modulation of neuronal potassium currents. These results suggest specific patterns of pulsed ultrasound can induce contemporaneous enhancement of both neuronal excitability and synaptic function, with implications for the application of FUS in experimental and therapeutic settings. Further study is now required to deduce the precise molecular mechanisms through which these changes occur.
Introduction
Purpose
transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To determine the molecular mechanisms by which pulsed ultrasound stimulation modulates voltage-gated potassium currents and synaptic function in primary rat cortical neurons.
Animal model / Human subject
cortical neurons from post-natal day 0 Wistar rats
Disease model
healthy
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
the increase in potassium current is still apparent 12-14h after the untrasound induced. The potassium current magnitude 24h after the untrasound induced have no significant differences comparing to sham group. However, no significant differences were observed for whole-cell sodium current.
Molecular mechanisms observations:
increases in potassium currents is not caused by total channel abundances. The observation that a marginally significant 1.15fold downregulation may implied that differential phosphorylation of a specific population of potassium channels caused the increase in potassium current
Ultrasound induces functional increases in excitatory synaptic transmission:
the frequency of mEPSCs was increased by 243% in ultrasound exposed neurons, suggesting that ultrasound induces plasticity at excitatory synapses, enhancing excitatory synaptic transmission in the cultured neurons
Duration of biological effect
12-14h (observed potassium current increases)
Safety-related matter
effects of these electrophysiological activities are reversible. No other significant safety issues were presented
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
transducer: MCUSD19A200B11RS, Farnell, UK
FUS Frequency
200kHz
FUS Pressure
0.12-0.39MPa*
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
100ms
Duration of a single FUS session
40s
Treatment frequency
single session: 40s
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