Bidirectional optogenetic control of inhibitory neurons in freely-moving mice
Ori Noked, Amir Levi, Shirly Someck, Ortal Amber-Vitos, Eran Stark

TL;DR
This paper introduces a lightweight, dual-wavelength optogenetic device for freely-moving mice, enabling bidirectional control of inhibitory neurons with minimal interference and heating.
Contribution
We developed a compact, lens-free, dual-color fiber-optic system for precise bidirectional optogenetic manipulation in freely-moving animals, overcoming previous bulkiness and complexity.
Findings
Successfully activated and silenced the same cortical PV neurons.
Operated effectively in neocortex and hippocampus of freely-moving mice.
Minimal device heating and electromagnetic interference.
Abstract
Objective: Optogenetic manipulations of excitable cells enable activating or silencing specific types of neurons. By expressing two types of exogenous proteins, a single neuron can be depolarized using light of one wavelength and hyperpolarized with another. However, routing two distinct wavelengths into the same brain locality typically requires bulky optics that cannot be implanted on the head of a freely-moving animal. Methods: We developed a lens-free approach for constructing dual-color head-mounted, fiber-based optical units: any two wavelengths can be combined. Results: Here, each unit was comprised of one 450 nm and one 638 nm laser diode, yielding light power of 0.4 mW and 8 mW at the end of a 50 micrometer multimode fiber. To create a multi-color/multi-site optoelectronic device, a four-shank silicon probe mounted on a microdrive was equipped with two dual-color and two…
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