Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Scientist Uses Sound Waves To Control Brain Cells

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Sep, 2015 01:15 PM
    In a first, an Indian American researcher from Salk Institute for Biological Studies in California has developed a new way to selectively activate brain, heart, muscle and other cells using ultrasonic sound waves.
     
    Dubbed as sonogenetics, the new technique has some similarities to the burgeoning use of light to activate cells in order to better understand the brain.
     
    “Light-based techniques are great for some uses. But this is a new, additional tool to manipulate neurons and other cells in the body,” informed ," Sreekanth Chalasani, assistant professor in Salk's molecular neurobiology laboratory.
     
    The new method - which uses the same type of waves used in medical sonograms - may have advantages over the light-based approach - known as optogenetics - particularly when it comes to adapting the technology to human therapeutics.
     
    In optogenetics, researchers add light-sensitive channel proteins to neurons they wish to study.
     
    By shining a focused laser on the cells, they can selectively open these channels, either activating or silencing the target neurons.
     
    Chalasani and his group decided to see if they could develop an approach that instead relied on ultrasound waves for the activation.
     
    “In contrast to light, low-frequency ultrasound can travel through the body without any scattering," he noted.
     
    “This could be a big advantage when you want to stimulate a region deep in the brain without affecting other regions,” adds Stuart Ibsen, post-doctoral fellow in the Chalasani lab.
     
    So far, sonogenetics has only been applied to C. elegans neurons.
     
    “The real prize will be to see whether this could work in a mammalian brain," Chalasani pointed out.
     
    His group has already begun testing the approach in mice.
     
    “When we make the leap into therapies for humans, I think we have a better shot with noninvasive sonogenetics approaches than with optogenetics,” he emphasised in a paper appeared in the journal Nature Communications.
     
    Chalasani obtained his PhD from University of Pennsylvania. He then did his post-doctoral research in the laboratory of Dr Cori Bargmann at the Rockefeller University in New York.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane
    Japanese search and rescue teams joined Chinese aircraft Sunday in the hunt for signs of missing Malaysian plane -- MH370 -- which has mysteriously vanished.

    Japan, China join forces in hunt for missing plane

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370:  No trace but hope sustains search
    Search for a missing Malaysian airliner yielded no result even more than a fortnight after it disappeared but Australian acting Prime Minister Warren Truss Sunday said the hunt will continue as long as there is hope. Search continued in the southern Indian Ocean after sightings of debris believed to be from the plane

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: No trace but hope sustains search

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'
    The search for the missing Malaysian airliner ended Saturday in the southern Indian Ocean with the sighting of some objects with the naked eye even as China said that one of its satellites has spotted an object in the search area.

    Missing Malaysia Flight MH370: Day's search ends with sighting of 'objects'

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat
    It looks like a replay of the Devyani Khobragade affair that strained India-US relations, but it isn't. A former domestic worker has slapped a civil suit against Bangladesh's consul general in New York and his wife accusing them of keeping him in slave-like conditions.

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women
    The Sri Lanka army Saturday ordered strict action against soldiers found harassing female recruits in a video circulating on the Internet.

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method
    New Zealand beat England by nine runs via the Duckworth-Lewis method in their opening World Twenty20 game at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium here Saturday

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method