Health
Researchers Unveil Revolutionary Fiber to Control Brain Neurons
A team of researchers at Washington University in St. Louis has developed an innovative fiber-optic device capable of manipulating neural activity across numerous brain neurons simultaneously. This new technology, named PRIME (Panoramically Reconfigurable IlluMinativE) fiber, represents a significant advancement in brain research, offering the potential to enhance our understanding of complex neural circuits.
The device enables the delivery of multi-site, reconfigurable optical stimulation through a fiber that is only the width of a human hair. According to Song Hu, a professor of biomedical engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering, and collaborator with Adam Kepecs, a professor of neuroscience and psychiatry at WashU Medicine, this technology allows for deep-brain stimulation at an unprecedented scale.
Traditional optical fibers, which power the field of optogenetics by using light-sensitive ion channels to control neurons, face considerable limitations. Typically, a single fiber can only deliver light to one specific location, significantly constraining research efforts that require stimulation of hundreds or thousands of neurons. The PRIME fiber, however, can direct light into multiple pathways, akin to a controllable disco ball, making it a game-changing tool for neuroscientific exploration.
Innovative Fabrication Techniques
The breakthrough came through the use of ultrafast-laser 3D microfabrication, which enabled the team to inscribe thousands of grating light emitters into the fiber. Shuo Yang, a postdoctoral researcher and the first author of the study, noted that these tiny mirrors are merely 1/100th the size of a human hair. This precise engineering allows the PRIME fiber to connect light to neurons across various brain regions.
In proof-of-concept studies involving animal models, Keran Yang, a graduate student and co-first author, demonstrated how the PRIME technology could stimulate specific subregions of the superior colliculus, a critical area for sensorimotor transformation. By manipulating the reconfigurable light patterns, the team was able to induce distinct behaviors, including freezing or escape responses.
Expanding Research Possibilities
The implications of this new technology extend far beyond simple stimulation. “This kind of tool lets us ask questions that were impossible before,” Yang explained. By shaping light in both space and time, researchers can begin to unravel how different neural circuits interact and how these interactions contribute to behavior.
Kepecs highlighted the significance of this innovation, stating that it expands the possibilities for linking distributed neural activity to perception and action. The device not only enhances experimental capabilities but also allows for a deeper investigation into the functions of neural circuits.
Looking towards the future, the research team aims to develop the PRIME technology into a bidirectional interface that combines optogenetics with photometry. This advancement would enable simultaneous stimulation and recording of brain activity, providing researchers with more comprehensive data. “Our ultimate goal is to make PRIME wireless and wearable,” Hu noted. A more convenient design would facilitate data collection from subjects in natural, unrestricted environments.
The findings of this groundbreaking research are set to be published in Nature Neuroscience in 2025, marking a significant milestone in the field of neuroscience. As researchers continue to refine this technology, the potential applications in understanding and treating neurological conditions could be transformative.
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