Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 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

    Indian-Descent Software Engineer Palani Kumanan Shares Pulitzer Prize For Investigative Reporting

    Indian-Descent Software Engineer Palani Kumanan Shares Pulitzer Prize For Investigative Reporting
    Palani Kumanan, who is a software architect and technical lead with Dow Jones that publishes the Journal, was a part of the winning project's graphics team, according to Michael Siconolfi, the newspaper's investigations editor.

    Indian-Descent Software Engineer Palani Kumanan Shares Pulitzer Prize For Investigative Reporting

    17 Indians Killed In Nepal As Bus Falls In River

    17 Indians Killed In Nepal As Bus Falls In River
    At least 17 Indian pilgrims were killed and more than 20 were injured on Wednesday when their bus veered off the highway and plunged into a river in Nepal, police said.

    17 Indians Killed In Nepal As Bus Falls In River

    Two Indians Among 2015 Yale World Fellows

    Two Indians Among 2015 Yale World Fellows
    Two Indians - SughaVazhvu Healthcare founder and CEO Zeena Johar and journalist-author Rahul Pandita - have been named 2015 Yale World Fellows by the prestigious Ivy League university.

    Two Indians Among 2015 Yale World Fellows

    US Sikhs Honour Attorney General Eric Holder

    US Sikhs Honour Attorney General Eric Holder
    The Sikh community here has honoured the US Attorney General Eric Holder with a siropa, a ceremonial robe of honour, and a Sewa Service Award for services to their community

    US Sikhs Honour Attorney General Eric Holder

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank
    Dedicated to research on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a $46 billion dollar plan linking China’s restive west to the Arabian Sea, the newly inaugurated Research and Development International (RANDI) organisation has been widely pilloried because its acronym sounds like “whore” in Urdu and Hindi

    Twitter Can't Stop Laughing As Pakistan, China Launch 'RANDI' Think Tank

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'
    As Pakistan was Tuesday celebrating Chinese investments worth $46 billion in the country, the militant Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) reported it has successfully test-fired its first indigenously developed missile. 

    Watch: Pakistani Taliban Announces Successful Test-Fire Of Missile 'Umar 1'