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Abstract
Neurostimulant drugs or magnetic/electrical stimulation techniques can overcome attention deficits, but these drugs or techniques are weakly beneficial in boosting the learning capabilities of healthy subjects. Here, we report a stimulation technique, mid-infrared modulation (MIM), that delivers mid-infrared light energy through the opened skull or even non-invasively through a thinned intact skull and can activate brain neurons in vivo without introducing any exogeneous gene. Using c-Fos immunohistochemistry, in vivo single-cell electrophysiology and two-photon Ca2+ imaging in mice, we demonstrate that MIM significantly induces firing activities of neurons in the targeted cortical area. Moreover, mice that receive MIM targeting to the auditory cortex during an auditory associative learning task exhibit a faster learning speed (~50% faster) than control mice. Together, this non-invasive, opsin-free MIM technique is demonstrated with potential for modulating neuronal activity.
Neurostimulant drugs or magnetic/electrical stimulation techniques have shown limited effects on learning capabilities of healthy subjects. The authors show that, without introducing an exogeneous gene, mid-infrared light can modulate firing activity of neurons in vivo and accelerate learning in mice.
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1 Third Military Medical University, Brain Research Center and State Key Laboratory of Trauma, Burns, and Combined Injury, Chongqing, China (GRID:grid.410570.7) (ISNI:0000 0004 1760 6682)
2 National Innovation Institute of Defense Technology, Innovation Laboratory of Terahertz Biophysics, Beijing, China (GRID:grid.410570.7)
3 Chongqing University, Center for Neurointelligence, School of Medicine, Chongqing, China (GRID:grid.190737.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 0154 0904)
4 Guangxi University, Advanced Institute for Brain and Intelligence and School of Physical Science and Technology, Nanning, China (GRID:grid.256609.e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2254 5798); Chinese Academy of Sciences, Brain Research Instrument Innovation Center, Suzhou Institute of Biomedical Engineering and Technology, Suzhou, China (GRID:grid.9227.e) (ISNI:0000000119573309)