Optogenetically Induced Behavioral and Functional Network Changes in Primates
Author(s)
Gerits, Annelies; Farivar, Reza; Rosen, Bruce R.; Wald, Lawrence L.; Vanduffel, Wim; Boyden, Edward; ... Show more Show less
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Optogenetics is currently the state-of-the-art method for causal-oriented brain research. Despite an increasingly large number of invertebrate and rodent studies showing profound electrophysiological and behavioral effects induced by optogenetics, only two primate studies have reported modulation of local single-cell activity but with no behavioral effects. Here, we show that optogenetic stimulation of cortical neurons within rhesus monkey arcuate sulcus, during the execution of a visually guided saccade task, evoked significant and reproducible changes in saccade latencies as a function of target position. Moreover, using concurrent optogenetic stimulation and opto-fMRI), we observed optogenetically induced changes in fMRI activity in specific functional cortical networks throughout the monkey brain. This is critical information for the advancement of optogenetic primate research models and for initiating the development of optogenetically based cell-specific therapies with which to treat neurological diseases in humans.
Date issued
2012-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Synthetic Neurobiology Group; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media Laboratory; Program in Media Arts and Sciences (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)Journal
Current Biology
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Gerits, Annelies, Reza Farivar, Bruce R. Rosen, Lawrence L. Wald, Edward S. Boyden, and Wim Vanduffel. “Optogenetically Induced Behavioral and Functional Network Changes in Primates.” Current Biology 22, no. 18 (September 2012): 1722–1726. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
09609822
1879-0445