Print

Print


New Insights Into Parkinson's Disease And Possible Treatments

ScienceDaily (Mar. 21, 2009) - About the only thing doctors have understood 
about deep-brain stimulation, which is widely used to treat Parkinson's 
disease symptoms, is that somehow it works for many patients.

In a new study that will be published March 20 in the journal Science, 
Stanford University researchers used light to illuminate how the treatment 
works, generating surprising insights into the diseased circuitry and also 
suggesting new ideas to improve Parkinson's therapy.

Parkinson's disease is a brain disorder that affects an estimated 1.5 
million Americans, causing tremors, stiffness and difficulty balancing. In 
those who undergo deep-brain stimulation, pulses of electricity are applied 
to the circuitry of a tiny brain region called the subthalamic nucleus.

Naturally, researchers suspected that cells within that region are somehow 
stimulated, or calmed, by the shocks, leading to reduced Parkinson's 
symptoms.

In the new study, which will also appear in an upcoming print issue of 
Science, the medical and engineering researchers found that by far the 
biggest effect in "Parkinsonian" rodents occurs not by stimulating cells in 
the subthalamic nucleus, but by stimulating the neural wires, called axons, 
that connect directly to it from areas closer to the surface of the brain.

"Pointing to these axons that converge on the region opens the door to 
targeting the source of those axons. This insight leads to deeper 
understanding of the circuit and could even lead to new kinds of 
treatments," said senior author Karl Deisseroth, MD, PhD, associate 
professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences. 
"Because these axons are coming from areas closer to the brain's surface, 
new treatments could perhaps be less invasive than deep-brain stimulation."

A spotlight on brain circuits

To perform the research, Deisseroth's team, which included students and 
faculty from bioengineering, neuroscience and neurosurgery, used a technique 
his lab has pioneered called "optogenetics." They genetically engineered 
specific types of cells, or neurons, in the subthalamic nucleus regions of 
different rodents to become controllable with light. A blue-colored laser 
pulse makes the neurons more active, while a yellow laser light suppresses 
activity.

[In a separate paper to be published in the journal Nature on March 18, 
Deisseroth and another cadre from within his research group show that the 
optogenetic technique can be applied not only to the electrical behavior of 
neurons, but also to the much broader biochemical activity of other cell 
types in the body.]

"Using the technology allowed us to separate the different circuit elements 
by placing them under optical control," Deisseroth said. "It allowed us to 
systematically move through the circuit, turning on or off different 
elements and finding out which modifications of the circuit corrected the 
symptoms."

This result also required a complementary method invented in the Deisseroth 
lab, namely delivering light via a thin, flexible fiber-optic cable deep 
into the brain of the animals, so that they can move and behave freely 
during the experiment.

The team tried every kind of neuron they could think of within the brain 
region itself, and found no effect. Out of persistence and desperation, like 
a person who has searched the whole house for the keys and finally finds 
them in the doorknob, the team decided to investigate the incoming axons. In 
rodents with cells that had been made light-sensitive, the researchers found 
dramatic results both with high-frequency and low-frequency pulses.

"The [high-frequency stimulation] effects were not subtle," the researchers 
wrote in the Science Express paper. "In nearly every case these severely 
Parkinsonian animals were restored to behavior indistinguishable from 
normal, and in every case the therapeutic effect immediately and fully 
reversed.upon discontinuation of the light pulse."

Low-frequency stimulation, meanwhile, caused the Parkinson's symptoms to 
become worse.

Deisseroth said the work raises even more interesting questions than it 
answers, such as what types of cells the axons target.
In addition, he asked, "In what way can we team up with other clinicians to 
help guide therapies capitalizing on this insight?"

Deisseroth said the most important outcome of the work, primarily carried 
out by graduate students Viviana Gradinaru and Murtaza Mogri, who are the 
first authors of the paper, is the new information about the role of the 
axons. He cautioned that, while the optogenetic technique had a therapeutic 
effect on the rodents and has worked well in every species tried so far, it 
still might not be the best therapy for people.

"There may be better or simpler ways to get that therapeutic value now that 
we have this key insight," he said.

This study is the first showing that optogenetics can be applied to brain 
disease. Deisseroth said another of this group's hopes is to extend the 
understanding of deep-brain stimulation to how it affects different 
diseases, such as depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

"Our goal is to better understand this disease and its treatment, and to 
help refine and generalize therapies by elucidating basic mechanisms," he 
said.

Other Stanford co-authors include bioengineering postdoctoral scholar 
Kimberly Thompson, PhD, and Jaimie Henderson, MD, associate professor of 
neurosurgery. The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the 
National Science Foundation and several private organizations including the 
Keck, Coulter, Snyder, Yu and Kinetics foundations.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
[log in to unmask] 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn