The technology, demonstrated for the first time in mice, one day may be used to treat pain, depression, epilepsy and other neurological disorders in people by targeting therapies to specific brain circuits, according to the researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
"In the future, it should be possible to manufacture therapeutic drugs that could be activated with light," said co-principal investigator Michael R Bruchas, associate professor of anesthesiology and neurobiology at Washington University.
Previous attempts to deliver drugs or other agents, such as enzymes or other compounds, to experimental animals have required the animals to be tethered to pumps and tubes that restricted their movement.
But the new devices were built with four chambers to carry drugs directly into the brain. By activating brain cells with drugs and with light, the scientists are getting an unprecedented look at the inner workings of the brain.
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"Now, we literally can deliver drug therapy with the press of a button," McCall said.
"We've designed it to exploit infrared technology, similar to that used in a TV remote. If we want to influence an animal's behaviour with light or with a particular drug, we can simply point the remote at the animal and press a button," he said.
As part of the study, the researchers showed that by delivering a drug to one side of an animal's brain, they could stimulate neurons involved in movement, which caused the mouse to move in a circle.
In other mice, shining a light directly onto brain cells expressing a light-sensitive protein prompted the release of dopamine, a neurotransmitter that rewarded the mice by making them feel good. The mice then returned to the same location in a maze to seek another reward.