Neuroscience’s New Toolbox
With the invention of optogenetics and other technologies,
researchers can investigate the source of emotions, memory, and consciousness
for the first time.
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WHY IT MATTERS
A better understanding of how memories,
emotions, and cognition work in the brain could lead to ways to improve and
manipulate such functions.
What might be called the “make love, not war”
branch of behavioral neuroscience began to take shape in (where else?)
California several years ago, when researchers in David J. Anderson’s
laboratory at Caltech decided to tackle the biology of aggression. They
initiated the line of research by orchestrating the murine version of Fight
Night: they goaded male mice into tangling with rival males and then, with
painstaking molecular detective work, zeroed in on a smattering of cells in the
hypothalamus that became active when the mice started to fight.
The hypothalamus is a small structure deep in
the brain that, among other functions, coördinates sensory inputs—the
appearance of a rival, for example—with instinctual behavioral responses. Back
in the 1920s, Walter Hess of the University of Zurich (who would win a Nobel in
1949) had shown that if you stuck an electrode into the brain of a cat and
electrically stimulated certain regions of the hypothalamus, you could turn a
purring feline into a furry blur of aggression. Several interesting hypotheses
tried to explain how and why that happened, but there was no way to test them.
Like a lot of fundamental questions in brain science, the mystery of aggression
didn’t go away over the past century—it just hit the usual empirical
roadblocks. We had good questions but no technology to get at the answers.
By 2010, Anderson’s Caltech lab had begun to
tease apart the underlying mechanisms and neural circuitry of aggression in
their pugnacious mice. Armed with a series of new technologies that allowed
them to focus on individual clumps of cells within brain regions, they stumbled
onto a surprising anatomical discovery: the tiny part of the hypothalamus that
seemed correlated with aggressive behavior was intertwined with the part
associated with the impulse to mate. That small duchy of cells—the technical
name is the ventromedial hypothalamus—turned out to be an assembly of roughly
5,000 neurons, all marbled together, some of them seemingly connected to
copulating and others to fighting.
“There’s no such thing as a generic neuron,”
says Anderson, who estimates that there may be up to 10,000 distinct classes of
neurons in the brain. Even tiny regions of the brain contain a mixture, he
says, and these neurons “often influence behavior in different, opposing
directions.” In the case of the hypothalamus, some of the neurons seemed to
become active during aggressive behavior, some of them during mating behavior,
and a small subset—about 20 percent—during both fighting and mating.
That was a provocative discovery, but it was
also a relic of old-style neuroscience. Being active was not the same as
causing the behavior; it was just a correlation. How did the scientists know
for sure what was triggering the behavior? Could they provoke a mouse to pick a
fight simply by tickling a few cells in the hypothalamus?
A decade ago, that would have been
technologically impossible. But in the last 10 years, neuroscience has been
transformed by a remarkable new technology called optogenetics, invented by
scientists at Stanford University and first described in 2005. The Caltech
researchers were able to insert a genetically modified light-sensitive gene
into specific cells at particular locations in the brain of a living,
breathing, feisty, and occasionally canoodling male mouse. Using a hair-thin
fiber-optic thread inserted into that living brain, they could then turn the
neurons in the hypothalamus on and off with a burst of light.
Optogenetics: Light Switches for Neurons
Anderson and his colleagues used optogenetics to
produce a video dramatizing the love-hate tensions deep within rodents. It
shows a male mouse doing what comes naturally, mating with a female, until the
Caltech researchers switch on the light, at which instant the murine lothario
flies into a rage. When the light is on, even a mild-mannered male mouse can be
induced to attack whatever target happens to be nearby—his reproductive
partner, another male mouse, a castrated male (normally not perceived as a
threat), or, most improbably, a rubber glove dropped into the cage.
“Activating these neurons with optogenetic
techniques is sufficient to activate aggressive behavior not only toward
appropriate targets like another male mouse but also toward inappropriate
targets, like females and even inanimate objects,” Anderson says. Conversely,
researchers can inhibit these neurons in the middle of a fight by turning the
light off, he says: “You can stop the fight dead in its tracks.”
Moreover, the research suggests that lovemaking
overrides war-making in the calculus of behavior: the closer a mouse was to
consummation of the reproductive act, the more resistant (or oblivious) he
became to the light pulses that normally triggered aggression. In a paper
published in Biological Psychiatry, titled “Optogenetics, Sex, and Violence in the Brain:
Implications for Psychiatry,” Anderson noted, “Perhaps the imperative to ‘make
love, not war’ is hard-wired into our nervous system, to a greater extent than
we have realized.” We may be both lovers and fighters, with the slimmest of
neurological distances separating the two impulses.
Optogenetics
and other new techniques mean scientists can begin to pinpoint the function of
the thousands of different types of neurons among the roughly 86 billion in the
human brain.
No one is suggesting that we’re on the verge of
deploying neural circuit breakers to curb aggressive behavior. But, as Anderson
points out, the research highlights a larger point about how a new technology
can reinvent the way brain science is done. “The ability of optogenetics to
turn a largely correlational field of science into one that tests causation has
been transformative,” he says.
What’s radical about the technique is that it
allows scientists to perturb a cell or a network of cells with exquisite
precision, the key to sketching out the circuitry that affects various types of
behavior. Whereas older technologies like imaging allowed researchers to watch
the brain in action, optogenetics enables them to influence that action,
tinkering with specific parts of the brain at specific times to see what
happens.
And optogenetics is just one of a suite of
revolutionary new tools that are likely to play leading roles in what looks
like a heyday for neuroscience. Major initiatives in both the United States and
Europe aspire to understand how the human brain—that tangled three-pound curd
of neurons, connective tissue, and circuits—gives rise to everything from
abstract thought to basic sensory processing to emotions like aggression.
Consciousness, free will, memory, learning—they are all on the table now, as
researchers use these tools to investigate how the brain achieves its seemingly
mysterious effects (see “Searching for the “Free Will”
Neuron”).
Connections
More than 2,000 years ago, Hippocrates noted
that if you want to understand the mind, you must begin by studying the brain.
Nothing has happened in the last two millennia to change that imperative—except
the tools that neuroscience is bringing to the task.
The history of neuroscience, like the history of
science itself, is often a story of new devices and new technologies. Luigi
Galvani’s first accidental electrode, which provoked the twitch of a frog’s
muscle, has inspired every subsequent electrical probe, from Walter Hess’s cat
prod to the current therapeutic use of deep brain stimulation to treat
Parkinson’s disease (approximately 30,000 people worldwide now have electrodes
implanted in their brains to treat this condition). The patch clamp allowed
neuroanatomists to see the ebb and flow of ions in a neuron as it prepares to
fire. And little did Paul Lauterbur realize, when he focused a strong magnetic
field on a single hapless clam in his lab at the State University of New York
at Stony Brook in the early 1970s, that he and his colleagues were laying the
groundwork for the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines that have helped
reveal the internal landscape and activity of a living brain.
Growing Neurons: Studying What Goes Wrong
But it is the advances in genetics and genomic
tools during the last few years that have truly revolutionized neuroscience.
Those advances made the genetic manipulations at the heart of optogenetics
possible. Even more recent genome-editing methods can be used to precisely
alter the genetics of living cells in the lab. Along with optogenetics, these
tools mean scientists can begin to pinpoint the function of the thousands of
different types of nerve cells among the roughly 86 billion in the human brain.
Nothing testifies to the value of a new
technology more than the number of scientists who rapidly adopt it and use it
to claim new scientific territories. As Edward Boyden, a scientist at MIT who
helped develop optogenetics, puts it, “Often when a new technology comes out,
there’s a bit of a land grab.”
And even as researchers grab those opportunities
in genomics and optogenetics, still other advances are coming on the scene. A
new chemical treatment is making it possible to directly see nerve fibers in
mammalian brains; robotic microelectrodes can eavesdrop on (and perturb) single
cells in living animals; and more sophisticated imaging techniques let
researchers match up nerve cells and fibers in brain slices to create a
three-dimensional map of the connections. Using these tools together to build
up an understanding of the brain’s activity, scientists hope to capture the
biggest of cognitive game: memory, decision-making, consciousness, psychiatric
illnesses like anxiety and depression, and, yes, sex and violence.
Scientists
speculated that if you could smuggle the gene for a light-sensitive protein
into a neuron and then pulse the cell with light, you might trigger it to fire.
You could turn specific neurons on and off.
In January 2013, the European Commission
invested a billion euros in the launch of its Human Brain Project, a 10-year
initiative to map out all the connections in the brain. Several months later,
in April 2013, the Obama administration announced an initiative called Brain
Research through Advanced Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN), which is
expected to pour as much as $1 billion into the field, with much of the early
funding earmarked for technology development. Then there is the Human
Connectome Project, which aims to use electron microscope images of sequential
slices of brain tissue to map nerve cells and their connections in three
dimensions. Complementary connectome and mapping initiatives are getting under
way at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in Virginia and the Allen Institute
for Brain Science in Seattle. They are all part of a large global effort, both
publicly and privately funded, to build a comprehensive picture of the human
brain, from the level of genes and cells to that of connections and circuits.
Last December, as an initial step in the BRAIN
Initiative, the National Institutes of Health solicited proposals for $40
million worth of projects on technology development in the neurosciences. “Why
is the BRAIN Initiative putting such a heavy emphasis on technology?” says
Cornelia Bargmann, the Rockefeller University neuroscientist who co-directs the
planning process for the project. “The real goal is to understand how the brain
works, at many levels, in space and time, in many different neurons, all at
once. And what’s prevented us from understanding that is limitations in
technology.”
Eavesdropping
Optogenetics had its origins in 2000, in
late-night chitchat at Stanford University. There, neuroscientists Karl
Deisseroth and Edward Boyden began to bounce ideas back and forth about ways to
identify, and ultimately manipulate, the activity of specific brain circuits.
Deisseroth, who had a PhD in neuroscience from Stanford, longed to understand
(and someday treat) the mental afflictions that have vexed humankind since the era
of Hippocrates, notably anxiety and depression (see “Shining Light on Madness”). Boyden, who was pursuing graduate work in brain function, had
an omnivorous curiosity about neurotechnology. At first they dreamed about
deploying tiny magnetic beads as a way to manipulate brain function in intact,
living animals. But at some point during the next five years, a different kind
of light bulb went off.
Since the 1970s, microbiologists had been
studying a class of light-sensitive molecules known as rhodopsins, which had
been identified in simple organisms like bacteria, fungi, and algae. These
proteins act like gatekeepers along the cell wall; when they detect a
particular wavelength of light, they either let ions into a cell or,
conversely, let ions out of it. This ebb and flow of ions mirrors the process
by which a neuron fires: the electrical charge within the nerve cell builds up
until the cell unleashes a spike of electrical activity flowing along the
length of its fiber (or axon) to the synapses, where the message is passed on
to the next cell in the pathway. Scientists speculated that if you could
smuggle the gene for one of these light-sensitive proteins into a neuron and
then pulse the cell with light, you might trigger it to fire. Simply put, you
could turn specific neurons in a conscious animal on—or off—with a burst of
light.
In 2004, Deisseroth successfully inserted the
gene for a light-sensitive molecule from algae into mammalian neurons in a
dish. Deisseroth and Boyden went on to show that blue light could induce the
neurons to fire. At about the same time, a graduate student named Feng Zhang
joined Deisseroth’s lab. Zhang, who had acquired a precocious expertise in the
techniques of both molecular biology and gene therapy as a high school student
in Des Moines, Iowa, showed that the gene for the desired protein could be
introduced into neurons by means of genetically engineered viruses. Again using
pulses of blue light, the Stanford team then demonstrated that it could turn
electrical pulses on and off in the virus-modified mammalian nerve cells. In a
landmark paper that appeared inNature Neuroscience in 2005 (after, Boyden says, it was rejected by Science), Deisseroth, Zhang, and Boyden described the
technique. (No one would call it “optogenetics” for another year.)
Neuroscientists immediately seized on the power
of the technique by inserting light-sensitive genes into living animals.
Researchers in Deisseroth’s own lab used it to identify new pathways that
control anxiety in mice, and both Deisseroth’s team and his collaborators at
Mount Sinai Hospital in New York used it to turn depression on and off in rats
and mice. And Susumu Tonegawa’s lab at MIT recently used optogenetics to create
false memories in laboratory animals.
When I visited Boyden’s office at MIT’s Media
Lab last December, the scientist called up his favorite recent papers involving
optogenetics. In a rush of words as rapid as his keystrokes, Boyden described
second-generation technologies already being developed. One involves
eavesdropping on single nerve cells in anesthetized and conscious animals in
order to see “the things roiling underneath the sea of activity” within a
neuron when the animal is unconscious. Boyden said, “It literally sheds light
on what it means to have thoughts and awareness and feelings.”
Scientists
often employ words like “surprising” and “unexpected” to characterize recent
results, reflecting the impact optogenetics has had on the understanding of
psychiatric illnesses.
Boyden’s group had also just sent off a paper
reporting a new twist on optogenetics: separate, independent neural pathways
can be perturbed simultaneously with red and blue wavelengths of light. The
technique has the potential to show how different circuits interact with and
influence each other. His group is also working on “insanely dense” recording
probes and microscopes that aspire to capture whole-brain activity. The
ambitions are not modest. “Can you record all the cells in the brain,” he says,
“so that you can watch thoughts or decisions or other complex phenomena emerge
as you go from sensation to emotion to decision to action site?”
Brain Mapping: Charting the Information Superhighways
A few blocks away, Feng Zhang, who is now an
assistant professor at MIT and a faculty member at the Broad Institute, listed
age-old neuroscience questions that might now be attacked with the new
technologies. “Can you do a memory upgrade and increase the capacity?” he
asked. “How are neural circuits genetically encoded? How can you reprogram the
genetic instructions? How do you fix the genetic mutations that cause miswiring
or other malfunctions of the neural system? How do you make the old brain
younger?”
In addition to helping to invent optogenetics,
Zhang played a central role in developing a gene-editing technique called
CRISPR (see “10 Breakthrough Technologies: Genome Editing,” May/June). The technology allows scientists
to target a gene—in neurons, for example—and either delete or modify it. If
it’s modified to include a mutation known or suspected to cause brain
disorders, scientists can study the progression of those disorders in lab
animals. Alternatively, researchers can use CRISPR in the lab to alter stem
cells that can then be grown into neurons to see the effects.
Transparency
Back at Stanford, when he’s not seeing patients
with autism spectrum disorders or depression in the clinic, Deisseroth
continues to invent tools that he and others can use to study these conditions.
Last summer, his lab reported a new way for scientists to visualize the cables
of nerve fibers, known as “white matter,” that connect distant precincts of the
brain. The technique, called Clarity, first immobilizes biomolecules such as
protein and DNA in a plastic-like mesh that retains the physical integrity of a
postmortem brain. Then researchers flush a kind of detergent through the mesh
to dissolve all the fats in brain tissue that normally block light. The brain
is rendered transparent, suddenly exposing the entire three-dimensional wiring
pattern to view.
Together, the new tools are transforming many
conventional views in neuroscience. For example, as Deisseroth noted in a
review article published earlier this year in Nature, optogenetics has challenged some of the ideas
underlying deep brain stimulation, which has been widely used to treat
everything from tremors and epilepsy to anxiety and obsessive-compulsive
disorder. No one knows just why it works, but the operating assumption has been
that its therapeutic effects derive from electrical stimulation of very
specific brain regions; neurosurgeons exert extraordinary effort to place
electrodes with the utmost precision.
In 2009, however, Deisseroth and colleagues
showed that specifically stimulating the white matter, the neural cables that
happen to lie near the electrodes, produced the most robust clinical
improvement in symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. In other words, it wasn’t the
neighborhood of the brain that mattered so much as which neural highways
happened to pass nearby. Scientists often employ words like “surprising” and
“unexpected” to characterize such recent results, reflecting the impact that
optogenetics has had on the understanding of psychiatric illness.
In the same vein, Caltech’s Anderson points out
that the public and scientific infatuation with functional MRI studies over the
last two decades has created the impression that certain regions of the brain
act as “centers” of neural activity—that the amygdala is the “center” of fear,
for example, or the hypothalamus is the “center” of aggression. But he likens
fMRI to looking down on a nighttime landscape from an airplane at 30,000 feet
and “trying to figure out what is going on in a single town.” Optogenetics, by
contrast, has provided a much more detailed view of that tiny subdivision of
cells in the hypothalamus, and thus a much more complex and nuanced picture of
aggression. Activating specific neurons in that little town can tip an organism
to make war, but activating the neurons next door can nudge it to make love.
The new techniques will give scientists the
first glimpses of human cognition in action—a look at how thoughts, feelings,
forebodings, and dysfunctional mental activity arise from the neural circuitry
and from the activity of particular types of cells. Researchers are just
beginning to gain these insights, but given the recent pace of technology
development, the picture might emerge sooner than anyone dreamed possible when
the light of optogenetics first flickered on a few years ago.
Stephen S. Hall is a
science writer and author in New York City. His last feature for MIT Technology Reviewwas “Repairing Bad Memories.”
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