Therapeutic deep brain stimulation disrupts movement-related subthalamic nucleus activity in Parkinsonian mice

Output Details

Preprint November 13, 2021

Published July 4, 2022

Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN DBS) relieves many motor symptoms of Parkinson's Disease (PD), but its underlying therapeutic mechanisms remain unclear. Since its advent, three major theories have been proposed: (1) DBS inhibits the STN and basal ganglia output; (2) DBS antidromically activates motor cortex; and (3) DBS disrupts firing dynamics within the STN. Previously, stimulation-related electrical artifacts limited mechanistic investigations using electrophysiology. We used electrical artifact-free GCaMP fiber photometry to investigate activity in basal ganglia nuclei during STN DBS in parkinsonian mice. To test whether the observed changes in activity were sufficient to relieve motor symptoms, we then combined electrophysiological recording with targeted optical DBS protocols. Our findings suggest that STN DBS exerts its therapeutic effect through the disruption of movement-related STN activity, rather than inhibition or antidromic activation. These results provide insight into optimizing PD treatments and establish an approach for investigating DBS in other neuropsychiatric conditions.

Identifier (DOI)
10.7554/eLife.75253
Tags
  • AAV (Adenoassociated Virus)
  • Animal models
  • Calcium
  • Electrophysiology
  • In Vivo
  • Motor symptoms
  • Original Research
  • Parkinson's disease
  • Voltage Imaging

Meet the Authors

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Jonathan Schor

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Isabelle Gonzalez Montalvo

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Perry WE Spratt

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Rea Brakaj

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Jasmine Stansil, BSc

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Emily Twedell, BA

    Key Personnel: Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Kevin J Bender

  • Alexandra Nelson, MD, PhD

    Co-PI (Core Leadership): Team Edwards

    University of California, San Francisco