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Influence of behavioral state on the neuromodulatory effect of low-intensity transcranial ultrasound stimulation on hippocampal CA1 in mouse.

Authors: Wang X, Zhang Y, Zhang K, Yuan Y

In process of brain stimulation, the influence of any external stimulus depends on the features of the stimulus and the initial state of the brain. Understanding the state-dependence of brain stimulation is very important. However, it remains unclear whether neural activity induced by ultrasound stimulation is modulated by the behavioral state. We used low-intensity focused ultrasound to stimulate the hippocampal CA1 regions of mice with different behavioral states (anesthesia, awake, and running) and recorded the neural activity in the target area before and after stimulation. We found the following: (1) there were different spike firing rates and response delays computed as the time to reach peak for all behavioral states; (2) the behavioral state significantly modulates the spike firing rate linearly increased with an increase in ultrasound intensity under different behavioral states; (3) the mean power of local field potential induced by TUS significantly increased under anesthesia and awake states; (4) ultrasound stimulation enhanced phase-locking between spike and ripple oscillation under anesthesia state. These results suggest that ultrasound stimulation-induced neural activity is modulated by the behavioral state. Our study has great potential benefits for the application of ultrasound stimulation in neuroscience.

Introduction

Purpose (a) Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective To determine how behavioral state alters the neuromodulatory effects of low-intensity transcranial ultrasound stimulation on hippocampal CA1 in mice.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, C57BL/6, 8–10 weeks, male
Disease model healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Hippocampus

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes tFUS-induced neuromodulation in the hippocampal CA1 was significantly altered by the animal's behavioral state, with stronger inhibitory effects observed in anesthetized vs. awake mice.
Duration of biological effect not reported
Safety-related matter The procedure was reported as safe with no evidence of tissue damage or behavioral deficits observed at the low-intensity parameters used.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument single-element focused ultrasound transducer
FUS Frequency 0.5 MHz
FUS Intensity 0.3 W/cm²
FUS Pressure not reported
FUS Mode not reported
Pulse duration 0.5 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 200 ms

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