4.8 Article

Remote control of neural function by X-ray-induced scintillation

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24717-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JST-PRESTO [JPMJPR168D, 16H05927, 17H05744, 19H03533]
  2. Asahi Glass Foundation
  3. Sumitomo Foundation [20K22680]
  4. JST-CREST [JPMJCR1656]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H05744, 16H05927] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The authors demonstrated the use of inorganic scintillators to remotely control neural functions in living animals through X-ray irradiation. The injectable scintillator microparticles were shown to effectively activate and inhibit midbrain dopamine neurons in freely moving mice, modulating behavior bidirectionally. This study highlights the potential of scintillator-mediated optogenetics for minimally invasive, wireless control of cellular functions at various tissue depths in biological and medical research.
Scintillators emit visible luminescence when irradiated with X-rays and may enable remote optogenetic control of neurons deep in the brain. The authors inject an inorganic scintillator to activate and inhibit midbrain dopamine neurons in freely moving mice by X-ray irradiation to modulate place preference behavior. Scintillators emit visible luminescence when irradiated with X-rays. Given the unlimited tissue penetration of X-rays, the employment of scintillators could enable remote optogenetic control of neural functions at any depth of the brain. Here we show that a yellow-emitting inorganic scintillator, Ce-doped Gd-3(Al,Ga)(5)O-12 (Ce:GAGG), can effectively activate red-shifted excitatory and inhibitory opsins, ChRmine and GtACR1, respectively. Using injectable Ce:GAGG microparticles, we successfully activated and inhibited midbrain dopamine neurons in freely moving mice by X-ray irradiation, producing bidirectional modulation of place preference behavior. Ce:GAGG microparticles are non-cytotoxic and biocompatible, allowing for chronic implantation. Pulsed X-ray irradiation at a clinical dose level is sufficient to elicit behavioral changes without reducing the number of radiosensitive cells in the brain and bone marrow. Thus, scintillator-mediated optogenetics enables minimally invasive, wireless control of cellular functions at any tissue depth in living animals, expanding X-ray applications to functional studies of biology and medicine.

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