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Optogenetics presents the ability to control membrane dynamics through the usage of transfected proteins (opsins) and light stimulation. However, as the field continues to grow, the original biological and stimulation tools used have become dated or limited in their uses. The usage of Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) in optical

Optogenetics presents the ability to control membrane dynamics through the usage of transfected proteins (opsins) and light stimulation. However, as the field continues to grow, the original biological and stimulation tools used have become dated or limited in their uses. The usage of Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) in optical stimulation offers greater resolution, finer control of pixel arrays, and the increased functionality of a flexible display at the cost of lower irradiance power density. This study was done to simulate methods using genetic and optical tools towards decreasing the threshold irradiance needed to initiate an action potential in a ChR2 expressing neuron. Simulations show that pulsatile stimulation can decrease threshold irradiances by increasing the overall duration of stimulus while keeping individual pulse durations below 5 ms. Furthermore, the redistribution of Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) to the apical dendrites and a change in wavelength to 625 nm both result in lower threshold irradiances. However, the model used has many discrepancies and has room for improvement in areas such as the light distribution model and ChR2 dynamics. The simulations run with this model however still present valuable insight and knowledge towards the usage of new stimulation methods and revisions on existing protocols.
ContributorsKyeh, James (Author) / Muthuswamy, Jitendran (Thesis director) / Crook, Sharon (Committee member) / Harrington Bioengineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Description
For two centuries, electrical stimulation has been the conventional method for interfacing with the nervous system. As interfaces with the peripheral nervous system become more refined and higher-resolution, several challenges appear, including immune responses to invasive electrode application, large-to-small axon recruitment order, and electrode size-dependent spatial selectivity. Optogenetics offers a

For two centuries, electrical stimulation has been the conventional method for interfacing with the nervous system. As interfaces with the peripheral nervous system become more refined and higher-resolution, several challenges appear, including immune responses to invasive electrode application, large-to-small axon recruitment order, and electrode size-dependent spatial selectivity. Optogenetics offers a solution that is less invasive, more tissue-selective, and has small-to-large axon recruitment order. By adding genes to express photosensitive proteins optogenetics provides neuroscientists the ability to genetically select cell populations to stimulate with simple illumination. However, optogenetic stimulation of peripheral nerves uses diffuse light to activate the photosensitive neural cell lines. To increase the specificity of stimulus response, research was conducted to test the hypothesis that multiple, focused light emissions placed around the circumference of optogenetic mouse sciatic nerve could be driven to produce differential responses in hindlimb motor movement depending on the pattern of light presented. A Monte Carlo computer simulation was created to model the number of emitters, the light emission size, and the focal power of accompanying micro-lenses to provide targeted stimulation to select regions within the sciatic nerve. The computer simulation results were used to parameterize the design of micro-lenses. By modeling multiple focused beams, only fascicles within a nerve diameter less than 1 mm are expected to be fully accessible to focused optical stimulation; a minimum of 4 light sources is required to generate a photon intensity at a point in a nerve over the initial contact along its surface. To elicit the same effect in larger nerves, focusing lenses would require a numerical aperture > 1. Microlenses which met the simulation requirements were fabricated and deployed on a flexible nerve cuff which was used to stimulate the sciatic nerve in optogenetic mice. Motor neuron responses from this stimulation were compared to global illumination; stimulation using the optical cuff resulted in fine motor movement of the extensor muscles of the digits in the hindlimb. Increasing optical power resulted in a shift to gross motor movement of hindlimb. Finally, varying illumination intensity across the cuff showed changes in the extension of individual digits.
ContributorsFritz, Nicholas (Author) / Blain Christen, Jennifer (Thesis advisor) / Abbas, James (Committee member) / Goryll, Michael (Committee member) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Committee member) / Helms-Tillery, Stephen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021