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Ultrasound-Induced Cascade Amplification in a Mechanoluminescent Nanotransducer for Enhanced Sono-Optogenetic Deep Brain Stimulation.

Authors: Wang W, Kevin Tang KW, Pyatnitskiy I, Liu X, Shi X, Huo D, Jeong J, Wynn T, Sangani A, Baker A, Hsieh JC, Lozano AR, Artman B, Fenno L, Buch VP, Wang H

Remote and genetically targeted neuromodulation in the deep brain is important for understanding and treatment of neurological diseases. Ultrasound-triggered mechanoluminescent technology offers a promising approach for achieving remote and genetically targeted brain modulation. However, its application has thus far been limited to shallow brain depths due to challenges related to low sonochemical reaction efficiency and restricted photon yields. Here we report a cascaded mechanoluminescent nanotransducer to achieve efficient light emission upon ultrasound stimulation. As a result, blue light was generated under ultrasound stimulation with a subsecond response latency. Leveraging the high energy transfer efficiency of focused ultrasound in brain tissue and the high sensitivity to ultrasound of these mechanoluminescent nanotransducers, we are able to show efficient photon delivery and activation of ChR2-expressing neurons in both the superficial motor cortex and deep ventral tegmental area after intracranial injection. Our liposome nanotransducers enable minimally invasive deep brain stimulation for behavioral control in animals via a flexible, mechanoluminescent sono-optogenetic system.

Introduction

Purpose mice, not specified, not specified, not specified
Study Objective Develop and demonstrate a cascaded mechanoluminescent nanotransducer that produces ultrasound-triggered blue light to enable minimally invasive, genetically targeted deep-brain optogenetic stimulation.
Disease model healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Ventral tegmental area
Cargo name and characteristics nanoparticle
Route of administration intracranial

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes FUS-triggered mechanoluminescence activated optogenetic neurons and modulated behavior in vivo.
Duration of biological effect 1 s
Safety-related matter Cascaded mechanoluminescent liposome nanotransducers generated blue light under FUS (1.5 MHz, 1.55 MPa) with subsecond latency, activating ChR2-expressing neurons in motor cortex and VTA after intracranial injection and enabling behavioral control in mice.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency 1.5 MHz
FUS Intensity not reported
FUS Pressure 1.55 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 50 ms
Duration of a single FUS session not reported

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