Chronically implantable LED arrays for behavioral optogenetics in primates
Author(s)
Rajalingham, Rishi; Sorenson, Michael; Azadi, Reza; Bohn, Simon; DiCarlo, James J; Afraz, Arash; ... Show more Show less
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Optogenetic methods have been widely used in rodent brains, but remain relatively under-developed for nonhuman primates such as rhesus macaques, an animal model with a large brain expressing sophisticated sensory, motor and cognitive behaviors. To address challenges in behavioral optogenetics in large brains, we developed Opto-Array, a chronically implantable array of light-emitting diodes for high-throughput optogenetic perturbation. We demonstrated that optogenetic silencing in the macaque primary visual cortex with the help of the Opto-Array results in reliable retinotopic visual deficits in a luminance discrimination task. We separately confirmed that Opto-Array illumination results in local neural silencing, and that behavioral effects are not due to tissue heating. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of the Opto-Array for behavioral optogenetic applications in large brains.
Date issued
2021-09Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT; Center for Brains, Minds, and MachinesJournal
Nature Methods
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Citation
Rajalingham, Rishi, Sorenson, Michael, Azadi, Reza, Bohn, Simon, DiCarlo, James J et al. 2021. "Chronically implantable LED arrays for behavioral optogenetics in primates." Nature Methods, 18 (9).
Version: Original manuscript