Scientists crack technique for tracking dopamine in brain

The study was published in the journal Lab on a Chip.Dopamine is one of the many neurotransmitters that neurons in the brain use to communicate with each other.

Scientists crack technique for tracking dopamine in brain
Representational image

New Delhi: Scientists have managed to crack a technique for tracking dopamime in brain, much more precisely.

The study was published in the journal Lab on a Chip.Dopamine is one of the many neurotransmitters that neurons in the brain use to communicate with each other.

 

Previous systems for measuring these neurotransmitters have been limited in how long they provide accurate readings and how much of the brain they can cover.

The new MIT device, an array of tiny carbon electrodes, overcomes both of those obstacles."Nobody has really measured neurotransmitter behavior at this spatial scale and timescale.

Having a tool like this will allow us to explore potentially any neurotransmitter-related disease," says Michael Cima, the David H. Koch Professor of Engineering in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, a member of MIT`s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, and the senior author of the study.

Furthermore, because the array is so tiny, it has the potential to eventually be adapted for use in humans, to monitor whether therapies aimed at boosting dopamine levels are succeeding.

Many human brain disorders, most notably Parkinson`s disease, are linked to dysregulation of dopamine.

"Right now deep brain stimulation is being used to treat Parkinson`s disease, and we assume that that stimulation is somehow resupplying the brain with dopamine, but no one`s really measured that," says Helen Schwerdt, a Koch Institute postdoc and the lead author of the paper.For this project, Cima`s lab teamed up with David H. Koch Institute Professor Robert Langer, who has a long history of drug delivery research, and Institute Professor Ann Graybiel, who has been studying dopamine`s role in the brain for decades with a particular focus on a brain region called the striatum.

Dopamine-producing cells within the striatum are critical for habit formation and reward-reinforced learning.

Until now, neuroscientists have used carbon electrodes with a shaft diameter of about 100 microns to measure dopamine in the brain.

However, these can only be used reliably for about a day because they produce scar tissue that interferes with the electrodes` ability to interact with dopamine, and other types of interfering films can also form on the electrode surface over time.

The MIT team designed electrodes that are only 10 microns in diameter and combined them into arrays of eight electrodes.

(With Agency inputs)

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