Focused Ultrasound Modulates Dopamine in a Mesolimbic Reward Circuit.
Authors: Olaitan GO, Ganesana M, Strohman A, Lynch WJ, Legon W, Jill Venton B
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter that plays a significant role in reward and motivation. Dysfunction in the mesolimbic dopamine pathway has been linked to a variety of psychiatric disorders, including addiction. Low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) has demonstrated effects on brain activity, but how LIFU affects dopamine neurotransmission is not known. Here, we applied three different intensities (6.5, 13, and 26 W/cm <sup>2</sup> I <sub>sppa</sub> ) of 2-minute LIFU to the prelimbic region (PLC) and measured dopamine in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) core using fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. Two minutes of LIFU sonication at 13 W/cm <sup>2</sup> to the PLC significantly reduced dopamine release by ∼ 50% for up to 2 hours. However, double the intensity (26 W/cm <sup>2</sup> ) resulted in less inhibition (∼30%), and half the intensity (6.5 W/cm <sup>2</sup> ) did not result in any inhibition of dopamine. Anatomical controls applying LIFU to the primary somatosensory cortex did not change NAc core dopamine, and applying LIFU to the PLC did not affect dopamine release in the caudate or NAc shell. Histological evaluations showed no evidence of cell damage or death. Modeling of temperature rise demonstrates a maximum temperature change of 0.5°C with 13 W/cm <sup>2</sup> , suggesting that modulation is not due to thermal mechanisms. These studies show that LIFU at a moderate intensity provides a noninvasive, high spatial resolution means to modulate specific mesolimbic circuits that could be used in future studies to target and repair pathways that are dysfunctional in addiction and other psychiatric diseases.
Introduction
Purpose
Transcranial ultrasound stimulation
Study Objective
To determine how low-intensity focused ultrasound applied to the prelimbic cortex alters dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens.
Animal model / Human subject
Rats, Sprague-Dawley, male, n=38
Targeted brain region(s)
Prelimbic Region (Plc)
Target coordinates
AP: 3.6 mm, ML: 0.6 mm
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Two-minute LIFU to the prelimbic cortex (PLC) at 13 W/cm2 Isppa produced ~50% reduction in nucleus accumbens core dopamine release lasting up to 2 hours (26 W/cm2 produced ~30% reduction; 6.5 W/cm2 produced no effect), with no histological damage and modulation unlikely due to thermal mechanisms.
Duration of biological effect
2 hours
Safety-related matter
Histological evaluations showed no evidence of cell damage or death. Modeling indicated a maximum temperature rise of 0.5°C with 13 W/cm2, suggesting modulation was non-thermal; no adverse effects were reported.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
10 MHz miniature-case immersion transducer (XMS-310-B, Olympusims, Waltham, MA)
FUS Frequency
10 MHz
FUS Intensity
6.5, 13, 26 W/cm2
FUS Pressure
0.47-1.06 Mpa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
500 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
2 minutes
Focal Characteristics
focal depth: None; focal length: None; aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
single session
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