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High resolution ultrasonic neural modulation observed via in vivo two-photon calcium imaging.

Authors: Cheng Z, Wang C, Wei B, Gan W, Zhou Q, Cui M

Neural modulation plays a major role in delineating the circuit mechanisms and serves as the cornerstone of neural interface technologies. Among the various modulation mechanisms, ultrasound enables noninvasive label-free deep access to mammalian brain tissue. To date, most if not all ultrasonic neural modulation implementations are based on ∼1 MHz carrier frequency. The long acoustic wavelength results in a spatially coarse modulation zone, often spanning over multiple function regions. The modulation of one function region is inevitably linked with the modulation of its neighboring regions. Moreover, the lack of in vivo cellular resolution cell-type-specific recording capabilities in most studies prevents the revealing of the genuine cellular response to ultrasound. To significantly increase the spatial resolution, we explored the application of high-frequency ultrasound. To investigate the neuronal response at cellular resolutions, we developed a dual-modality system combining in vivo two-photon calcium imaging and focused ultrasound modulation. The studies show that the ∼30 MHz ultrasound can suppress the neuronal activity in awake mice at 100-μm scale spatial resolutions, paving the way for high-resolution ultrasonic neural modulation. The dual-modality in vivo system validated through this study will serve as a general platform for studying the dynamics of various cell types in response to ultrasound.

Introduction

Purpose Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To evaluate whether high-frequency (~30 MHz) focused ultrasound can provide high-spatial-resolution neural modulation and to develop a dual-modality in vivo two-photon calcium imaging and ultrasound system to measure cellular responses.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, C57BL/6, 8–12 weeks, not reported
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method In vivo two-photon calcium imaging (optical image guidance) with the mouse positioned using a 3-axis motorized stage; targets/electrodes were centered in the two-photon focal plane (through a cranial window) to align the FUS.
Targeted brain region(s) V1
Target coordinates Not provided in the paper text.

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes 30 MHz FUS reversibly suppressed neuronal activity in V1 with high spatial resolution (170 µm).
Duration of biological effect 100 s
Safety-related matter No microglial aggregation or thermal injury (<1°C) observed.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 30 MHz focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency 30 MHz
FUS Intensity 4.46 W/cm²
FUS Pressure 0.36 MPa
FUS Mode continuous
Pulse duration 60000 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 5 min
Focal Characteristics 12.7 mm
Treatment frequency single session

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