Abstract
Optogenetic tools have opened a rich experimental landscape for understanding neural function and disease. Here, we present the first validation of eight optogenetic constructs driven by recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors and a WGA-Cre based dual injection strategy for projection targeting in a widely-used New World primate model, the common squirrel monkey Saimiri sciureus. We observed opsin expression around the local injection site and in axonal projections to downstream regions, as well as transduction to thalamic neurons, resembling expression patterns observed in macaques. Optical stimulation drove strong, reliable excitatory responses in local neural populations for two depolarizing opsins in anesthetized monkeys. Finally, we observed continued, healthy opsin expression for at least one year. These data suggest that optogenetic tools can be readily applied in squirrel monkeys, an important first step in enabling precise, targeted manipulation of neural circuits in these highly trainable, cognitively sophisticated animals. In conjunction with similar approaches in macaques and marmosets, optogenetic manipulation of neural circuits in squirrel monkeys will provide functional, comparative insights into neural circuits which subserve dextrous motor control as well as other adaptive behaviors across the primate lineage. Additionally, development of these tools in squirrel monkeys, a well-established model system for several human neurological diseases, can aid in identifying novel treatment strategies.
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Introduction
In rodents, optogenetic tools and viral approaches to neural circuit targeting have developed tremendously in the past decade, enabling precise, functional manipulation of neural circuitry and highly targeted approaches to therapeutic intervention in neurological disease states. Largely due to the considerable genetic, anatomical, and behavioral differences between humans and rodent models, translating this experimental toolkit for use in nonhuman primates is critical to refining our understanding of and developing treatments for human neurological disease1,2. Among primates, the architectural macro-organization of the neocortex has been largely conserved through evolution3,4. This shared structure has enabled fruitful neuroanatomical comparisons, in which the differential cognitive, sensory, and motor abilities and behavioral specializations of each species can be correlated with differences in brain structure. Optogenetic tools promise to accelerate these comparative efforts by facilitating precisely-targeted manipulations of critical pathways in the primate brain. These manipulations, in turn, may provide bi-directional insight across primate species into functional similarities and differences in neural organization.
Functional validation of optogenetic tools has been successfully demonstrated in rhesus macaques5,6 and marmosets7 using AAV vectors, suggesting that achieving AAV-based transfection of opsins in additional primate species might be readily possible. The behavioral consequences of optogenetic manipulation in rhesus have varied in magnitude, with brain region, behavioral readout, opsin construct, and targeting strategy (e.g.6,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15). Collectively, these reports highlight the need for refined viral targeting strategies to facilitate precise, effective optical control in nonhuman primates16,17,18,19.
Squirrel monkeys are a versatile, widely used New World primate model in biomedical research20. They can be straightforwardly handled and readily trained in a laboratory setting21, possess a large brain with a defined central sulcus (Fig. 1a), and display a rich repertoire of social, cognitive, and visually-guided motor behaviors22,23,24,25. Extending optogenetic tools to squirrel monkeys enables neuroscientists to probe the functional significance of cross-species neuroanatomical differences with fine temporal and anatomical precision, especially when combined with viral approaches capable of targeting particular neural circuit pathways17,26.
Here, we report expression of an array of optogenetic tools in squirrel monkeys. First, we demonstrate that a broad panel of depolarizing and hyperpolarizing opsins express in squirrel monkey cortex under the control of multiple genetic promoters (CaMKIIα, hSyn, and hThy1). Second, we demonstrate high-fidelity optical control even at high evoked firing rates in anesthetized electrophysiological recordings, recapitulating responses reported in rhesus6,12,18. Third, we report anterograde and retrograde transduction patterns consistent with trafficking of AAV-based transgenes16,27,28. Fourth, we demonstrate for the first time in primates a WGA-Cre dependent dual-viral opsin expression system which enables targeting of cells defined by connections with another brain region for optogenetic manipulation. Fifth, we established that opsins continued to express safely in squirrel monkey cortex for at least one year following viral injection (similar to long-term expression in rhesus macaques), with no adverse health consequences or neurological abnormalities observed. Finally, we established that optogenetic expression patterns, functionality, and long-term viability observed in squirrel monkeys closely resemble observations in rhesus macaques. These similarities underscore the utility of squirrel monkeys as an attractive, complementary model for neural circuit dissection and as a flexible platform for assessing the safety and long-term efficacy of optogenetic manipulations.
Results
Local expression of diverse opsin-promoter panel
We injected optogenetic constructs into a total of 12 female squirrel monkeys (mean 13.6 ± 2.6 std. dev. years at time of injection). Supp. Table 1 provides a full listing of injected constructs and locations. We chose to use adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors to transfect neurons with optogenetic constructs as AAV offers a lower theoretical risk of insertional mutagenesis than lentivirus29,30,31,32 and has been employed in several human clinical trials33,34. For eight constructs, we selected AAV2/5, a pseudotyped AAV that combines the genome of AAV2 with the capsid of AAV5 to improve transduction efficiency and neural tropism (https://www.addgene.org/viral-vectors/aav/aav-guide/). By convention, this pseudotyped AAV2/5 is referred to by its capsid component as AAV5. AAV5 efficiently transduces neurons in both wild-type rats and rhesus monkeys6,35,36,37,38. We successfully transduced both depolarizing (ChR2(H134R), C1V1(TT), SSFO) and hyperpolarizing (eNpHR3.0, eArch3.0) opsins39,40,41,42,43, chosen to span a large range of opsin deactivation kinetics (τoff) and activation wavelengths (Fig. 1b)40,43. This range of constructs enables genetically-targeted, bidirectional optical control (Fig. 1c) and were expressed in neurons across an array of cortical regions at 6–12 weeks post-injection (Fig. 1d–k, Supp. Fig. 1d to k). Strong expression was reliably observed within 1 mm of the injection site, although we anticipate that the exact viral spread will depend on viral titer and the tropism and expression strength of the particular serotype and promoter combination selected. Minimal gliosis was observed outside of the immediate vicinity (50 μm) of the injection site (Supp. Fig. 2).
Expression in axonal projections and in connected neurons
In contrast to more genetically tractable rodent models in which transgenic lines and specific promoters are prevalent40,44,45, strategies for genetically-targeted optical control in primates are less well-developed. However, many fundamental questions in systems neuroscience concern the interactions between brain areas of interest. These questions could be tackled experimentally by targeting optogenetic constructs or other transgenes to anatomically-defined projections. For example, by optically inhibiting axonal terminals in primary motor cortex (M1) which arise in primary somatosensory cortex (S1), one could potentially optically suppress sensory input to motor cortex during reaching movements and explore the neural and behavioral consequences of this manipulation. Towards this end we evaluated whether the expression patterns of opsins injected in squirrel monkey cortex would enable optogenetic manipulation targeted to specific projections. In a representative squirrel monkey (Sq. B), injected with AAV5-hSyn-eNpHr3.0-eYFP in primary somatosensory cortex (S1) (Fig. 2b), we observed eYFP fluorescence in axonal projections in downstream primary motor cortex (M1) (Fig. 2c), internal capsule (Fig. 2f), the ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPL) of thalamus (Fig. 2g), the pyramidal tract (Fig. 2h), and in cervical spinal cord (Fig. 2i). These findings are consistent with the established use of AAV infection for anterograde tracing46. Importantly, this robust axonal expression suggests that restricting light delivery to a downstream target could enable optical modulation of projection terminals, facilitating optical control over information flow between brain regions of interest.
We also observed transduction of AAV5 along corticothalamic projections. In squirrel monkeys Sq. E and Sq. P, following injection of AAV5-hSyn-ChR2(H134R)-eYFP into M1 (Fig. 3a) we observed expression in cell bodies in upstream ventral lateral (VL) thalamus which relays cerebellar inputs to M1 (Fig. 3c,d). This suggests either retrograde transduction–AAV5 was taken up by thalamocortical axonal projections and trafficked to thalamic cell bodies–or anterograde, transsynaptic tranduction–AAV5 was transported along corticothalamic axons, released at terminals, and taken up by connected thalamic neurons. We also observed expression in processes in VL, likely in both projections from M1 to VL and the processes of the expressing VL cell bodies. In macaques, we observed a similar corticothalamic transduction pattern with expressing cell bodies in VL thalamus following the injection of the same construct into M1 of macaque Rh. D. (Fig. 3b). This comparison highlights the microstructural similarities between rhesus squirrel monkey anatomy and viral transfection patterns.
Dual-injection strategy for targeting circuit projections
Axonal expression and transduction may be useful for certain circuit manipulations, but we sought to achieve more precise targeting of anatomically defined circuit elements using a combinatorial dual-viral injection approach. Additionally, such an approach might prove useful in targeting cortico-cortical projection neurons that resist transfection by retrograde transduction or anterograde, transcellular transfer via a single AAV construct (see Discussion).
We first attempted to utilize long-term herpes simplex virus (LT-HSV) to target anatomically-defined projections. In Sq. R., we injected LT-HSV-Ef1α-Cre-mCherry47 into M1 and AAV5-hSyn-DIO-eYFP into PMd. However, we observed significant neuronal cell death near the M1 injection site (Supp. Fig. 3).
In another squirrel monkey Sq. I, we employed an alternative targeting strategy (Fig. 4a). We injected the an AAV2 viral vector containing transsynaptic tracer wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA) fused to Cre-recombinase with an mCherry reporter in dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) (AAV2-Ef1α-mCherry-IRES-WGA-Cre). This resulted in expression of mCherry in PMd (Fig. 4b, 50 mCherry+/199 DAPI+) and transsynaptic transport of WGA-Cre, expressed independently of mCherry due to IRES, to connected cell bodies in M140,41. We then injected a Cre-dependent ChR2(H134R) construct (AAV8-Ef1α-DIO-ChR2(H134R)-eYFP) into M1. This configuration was designed to target expression of ChR2(H134R) to the anatomically-defined subset of M1 neurons connected with PMd. This approach resulted in ChR2(H134R) expression in M1 neurons (Fig. 4c, 7 YFP+/71 DAPI+) which putatively project to or receive projections from PMd. Near the injection sites, neuronal morphology based on YFP staining suggested that neurons remained intact and without gross evidence of tissue destruction. Consistent with restricted spread of WGA-Cre from PMd to M1, we observed no mCherry-expressing neurons in the vicinity of the M1 injection site (0 mCherry+/71 DAPI+) and no eYFP-expressing neurons near the PMd injection site (0 YFP+/199 DAPI+), although see Discussion for potential caveats. To our knowledge, this represents the first validation of a dual-viral, transsynaptic strategy for targeting opsin expression to projection targets in primates, an approach which facilitates a new class of experiments utilizing precise anatomically-specific optical control.
Opsin functionality
To verify the functionality of the optogenetic constructs, we developed a mobile optical stimulation and electrophysiology cart (Supp. Fig. 4) in order to perform anesthetized recordings in previously injected squirrel monkeys in the operating room. In a squirrel monkey (Sq. P) injected with AAV5-hSyn-ChR2(H134R), well isolated single-units (Fig. 5a–d and Supp. Fig. 5) and multi-unit activity (Supp. Figs 6 and 7) responded robustly to optical stimulation at 473 nm. In contrast, 635 nm wavelength light pulses did not evoke detectable neural responses (Supp. Fig. 8), as expected from the opsin’s activation spectrum. Both pulsed and continuous stimulation reliably evoked spiking activity at the optrode (Fig. 5c,d, Supp. Fig. 5b).
In another squirrel monkey (Sq. U), we injected the red-shifted opsin, AAV5-CamKIIα-C1V1 into PMd. Near the injection site, 561 nm light drove reliable responses in multiunit activity (Supp. Fig. 9), as expected from this opsin’s activation spectrum and previously demonstrated in rodents48. Opsins such as C1V1 with red-shifted activation spectra are important for species with larger brain volume, as the reduction in light scattering in brain tissue with longer wavelengths of light may permit greater depth of penetration40.
We next designed a stimulation protocol to test the fidelity of optogenetic control in our anesthetized preparation over longer timescales common in rhesus awake-behaving neurophysiology experiments. Over 90 minutes of episodic stimulation, we tracked the response of multi-unit activity in two squirrel monkeys (Sq. E and Sq. T) injected with AAV5-hSyn-ChR2(H134R) in M1 cortex (Supp. Figs 10 and 11). Pulse trains (50 Hz) and continuous pulses (200 ms) both elevated firing rates for the full 90 minute period (p < 0.001, sign-rank test), although pulse trains evoked more consistent responses over the full duration (p < 0.001, rank-sum test).
Many neurological conditions implicate abnormal oscillatory rhythms in or across specific brain regions, suggesting that the ability to drive rhythmic patterns using optogenetic tools may be useful for future therapies28,49. We explored this possibility in an anesthetized squirrel monkey (Sq. U) injected in M1 with AAV5-CaMKIIα-C1V1(T/T), an opsin with slightly slower kinematics and enhanced light sensitivity relative to ChR2(H134R)48. We delivered a frequency-modulated optical stimulus. The laser delivered constant-amplitude light pulses at a “carrier” rate that was varied between 30 Hz and 130 Hz. The carrier rate was varied according to a sinusoidal “signal” pattern at modulation frequencies up to 14 cycles/sec. This stimulation paradigm reliably evoked rapid rhythmic modulation of nearby firing rates according to the signal pattern (Fig. 5f).
Long-term opsin expression and animal health
As neuroscience experiments in primates often require long time periods of behavioral training, it is critical to validate that virally-delivered optogenetic constructs remain safe and effective in primates over long timescales. Towards this end, we utilized the squirrel monkey model to establish whether virally-transfected optogenetic constructs continue to express over long timescales and whether such long-term expression causes any adverse neurological consequences. We injected four squirrel monkeys with either AAV5-hThy1-ChR2(H134R)-eYFP (Sq. D and Sq. H) or AAV5-hThy1-eNpHR3.0-eYFP (Sq. M and Sq. O) in M1. To assess the safety of long-term opsin expression, we monitored the health of all four squirrel monkeys for one year. During this time period, the squirrel monkeys were overall alert, active, and healthy, and no adverse health effects were noted. We also performed a standard panel of blood tests on each squirrel monkey at timepoints before and after one year post-injection (Supp. Table 2). These results confirmed the squirrel monkeys remained in good health with no detectable inflammatory response, consistent with undetectable levels of TNFα and C-reactive protein in the blood. We also acquired T1-weighted, T2-weighted, and T2-FLAIR brain MRI images of Sq. M (Fig. 6 and Supp. Fig. 13) and Sq. O (Supp. Figs 14 and 15) at one year post-injection. These images, reviewed by a clinical neuroradiologist, did not exhibit any pathological features (e.g. focal parenchymal injury, hemorrhage, demyelination, edema, or features that would suggest inflammation).
After at least one year post-injection, we assessed opsin expression in Sq. D and Sq. H. In both monkeys, strong expression was visible in the vicinity of the injection site (Fig. 7a,b,d) as well as in projecting fibers in subcortical white matter (Fig. 7c). We observed minimal gliosis limited to the immediate vicinity of the injection track (Fig. 7d,e), similar to our results in the short-term expression monkeys (Supp. Fig. 2).
To further validate the long-term efficacy of optogenetic expression, we performed a similar experiment in 2 rhesus macaques (Rh. O and Rh. Q). These macaques were injected with AAV5-CaMKIIα-C1V1(TT)-eYFP in either PMd (Rh. Q) or both M1 and PMd (Rh. O). At 188 weeks post-initial injection, we performed histology on rhesus monkey Q. These images demonstrated strong expression in the vicinity of the C1V1 injection sites (Fig. 8a,b) and in subcortical white matter below the injections (Fig. 8c). To establish the long-term functionality of the C1V1 opsin, we performed repeated optrode stimulation and recording sessions from 130–240 days from injections. For each unit or multi-unit recorded at the optrode, we measured the evoked changes in firing rates while the monkey was waiting passively between trials of a reaching task. Strong responses were detectable throughout the entire time period measured (Supp. Fig. 16), and only very small trends towards reduced efficacy were observed in both rhesus monkeys, though neither reached statistical significance (Rhesus Q: −0.49 spikes/sec/day [−1.08 to 0.10, 95% CI], n = 78 units; Rhesus O: −0.11 spikes/sec/day [−0.35 to 0.13, 95% CI], n = 74 units).
Discussion
The goal of this project was to demonstrate successful transfection of optogenetic constructs in squirrel monkeys. Here, we demonstrate the ability to assess diverse opsin panels in the squirrel monkey brain, functional validation of optically-evoked responses in vivo, strategies to target optical control to specific neuron types or projection targets, and the feasibility of long-term experiments in which continued opsin expression and animal health are maintained over the long timescales characteristic of nonhuman primate research. AAV5 successfully transfected cortical neurons and enabled expression of a variety of inhibitory (eNpHR3.0 and eArch3.0) and excitatory (ChR2(H134R), C1V1(TT) and SSFO) constructs under the control of the CaMKIIα, hSyn, and hThy1 promoters. As discussed below, histology revealed expression of the panel of promoter and opsin combinations across 12 squirrel monkeys that closely paralleled opsin expression patterns and functionality in macaques, including anterograde trafficking to known downstream projection targets and retrograde transduction along thalamocortical inputs. We note that all of our injections were in an older cohort of female squirrel monkeys; we expect that expression might be stronger in younger animals. While we anticipate that our results should generalize to male squirrel monkeys, further experimentation would be required to verify similar expression patterns.
Targeting of projection pathways
Anterograde spread
In our panel of squirrel monkeys injected with AAV5, histology demonstrated opsin expression in axonal projections originating at the cortical injection sites and terminating in known downstream targets, consistent with well-established anterograde expression patterns noted with recombinant AAV vectors [e.g.46]. This presents the possibility of delivering light at distal axonal terminals to selectively activate or suppress specific circuit outputs, as has been effectively employed in rodents (e.g.50,51,52) and macaques (e.g.14,16). The strength of anterograde expression in axonal projection as well as the spread of expression around the injection site are likely dependent on both the overall strength of transgene expression (in turn modulated by the injection parameters, viral titer, viral tropism, promoter strength, etc.) as well as the trafficking of the transgene along axonal fibers. This transport efficiency may be enhanced by using specific post-transcriptional targeting sequences that result in improved membrane targeting of the opsin protein41,43. While the overall efficiency and tropism of AAV1, 2, 5, 8, and 9 have been compared in primates7,38,53, more systematic, quantitative comparisons are needed.
Retrograde and anterograde transduction
In both macaques and squirrel monkeys, we also observed expression in cell bodies located in the ventral lateral (VL) nucleus of the thalamus following injection of AAV5-hSyn-ChR2(H134R) in primary motor cortex (M1). These expressing VL neurons could have been transduced via either retrograde or anterograde transduction, which are difficult to dissociate in this circuit due to the presence of reciprocal connections between M1 and VL54. In retrograde transduction, the virus would infect VL axon terminal fields in M1 and be transported back to cell bodies in VL. In anterograde, transsynaptic transduction, the virus would be transported along M1 axons terminating in VL, released at the axon terminal, and be taken up by second order VL cell bodies. The relative propensity for transsynaptic anterograde versus retrograde transduction of adeno-associated viruses is known to be serotype dependent55. Transsynaptic, anterograde transduction has been previously demonstrated with AAV2 in rats56 along nigrostriatal projections and in macaques along nigrostriatal and thalamocortical projections57,58, and with pseudotypes AAV2/8 and 2/9 in mice from entorhinal cortex to dentate gyrus59.
Retrograde transduction has also been previously demonstrated with recombinant AAV vectors both in rodents and primates. In mice, recombinant AAV pseudotypes 2/1, 2/5, 2/7, and to lesser extent 2/8 all drive retrograde transduction along nigrostriatal projections35. AAV2 did not result in retrograde expression in this context but is capable of weak transduction from skeletal muscles back to motor neurons in the spinal cord60 and between the hippocampi61. AAV2/1 injected in S1 also retrogradely transfects layer 5 pyramidal neurons in the contralateral S162. However, Rothermel and Brunert62 reported dramatic differences in the ability of rAAV constructs with identical pseudotype to mediate retrograde expression solely attributed to differences in the vector construct itself. In rats, pseudotypes AAV1, 2/1 and 2/5 (but not 2/2) exhibit retrograde transduction along nigrostriatal projections63,64 and AAV2/1 transduces medial entorhinal cortical neurons retrogradely from the hippocampus65. In primates, retrograde transduction has been reported with multiple AAV serotypes along several axonal pathways. AAV1 mediates nigrostriatal transfection in cynomolgus macaques64. AAV6 mediates retrograde transduction from the gastrocnemius muscle to lumbar motor neurons in African green monkeys66 and along corticostriatal, nigrostriatal, and thalamostriatal axonal pathways in cynomolgus macaques67. AAV8 and AAV9 injections in striatum labeled nigrostriatal, corticostriatal, thalamostriatal and geniculocortical pathways in marmosets68.
Collectively, this literature suggests that anterograde and retrograde transduction by recombinant AAVs likely depends on viral serotype, the viral vector construct, and the identity of the axonal projection. It is also possible that expression time, viral titer, injection protocol, and the genetic promoter may modulate the efficiency of retrograde transduction at terminals and/or of anterograde transduction and uptake by second order neurons. One of these factors may explain the discrepancy between the expression observed here in thalamocortical projection neurons and the results of Galvan and colleagues12, who report no expression in motor thalamus following injection in primary motor cortex of either AAV5-CaMKIIα-ChR2(H134R) or AAV5-CaMKIIα-C1V1. The difference in promoter is notable, although thalamic projection neurons would be expected to express CaMKIIα as well69.
Remarkably, we did not observe transduction of AAV5 from primary motor cortex along any of the known corticocortical connections with posterior parietal, primary somatosensory (1,2,3a), and frontal regions (notably ventral and dorsal premotor, supplementary motor, and cingulate motor areas)70,71,72,73,74,75. To our knowledge, prior reports of cortico-cortical transsynaptic transduction with AAV are limited to inter-hemispheric spread to contralateral S1, observed weakly with AAV9 in marmosets7 and with AAV2/1 in mice62. Furthermore62, observe that retrograde transfer from V1 injection of AAV8 and AAV9 is limited to the LGN; none of the cortical regions that reciprocally connect with V1 were labeled. Further experiments are needed to explore the conditions in which retrograde gene transfer along cortio-cortical pathways occurs, though we speculate that some differentiating feature of thalamocortical axons76 (or nigrostriatal, corticostriatal, thalamostriatal, geniculocortical, etc.) makes them particularly susceptible to AAV infection and retrograde transfer. AAV is internalized by cells via receptor-mediated endocytosis from clathrin-coated pits77. The particular receptors and relative efficiencies vary by serotype, and many viruses possess redundant methods for cellular entry that may be preferentially used in certain regions63,78.
WGA-mediated transduction
In addition to anterograde and retrograde transfer with single constructs, we also demonstrate a dual-viral strategy for restricting opsin expression to the anatomically-defined subset of neurons in one brain region connected with a second brain region, enabling precise targeting of neural circuit projections in the primate brain. Our approach, previously demonstrated in rodents41,65, leverages wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) as a transsynaptic tracer to deliver Cre-recombinase to connected neurons which have been infected with a Cre-dependent opsin. Although this method is a promising approach for improving anatomic specificity of opsin expression, we note that there are several possible mechanisms mediating expression of ChR2-eYFP in M1 neurons connected to PMd. Two of these mechanisms leverage WGA as a transsynaptic tracer. One notable feature of using WGA as the transsynaptic tracer is its ability to undergo both anterograde and retrograde transceullar transfer79,80. Consequently, AAV2-WGA-Cre-IRES-mCherry (here on referred to as AAV2 for simplicity) could infect PMd neurons, resulting in mCherry expression in cell bodies in PMd. Then WGA-Cre could traffic transsynaptically to presynaptic M1 neurons, leading to recombination and ChR2-eYFP expression in AAV8-DIO-ChR2-eYFP (here on referred to as AAV8 for simplicity) infected M1 neurons that project to PMd. Alternatively, AAV2 could infect PMd neurons and WGA-Cre could first transport anterogradely along the entire length of M1-projecting axons and then travel transsynaptically to connected neurons in M1. Recombination by Cre would then drive ChR2-eYFP expression in AAV8 infected M1 neurons receiving input from PMd. These two possibilities are difficult to distinguish due to reciprocal connectivity between PMd and M1. If this possibility of bi-directional transfer of the recombinase complicates interpretation of a particular optogenetics experiment, a non-toxic fragment of tetanus toxin (TTC) is a potential alternative tracer element which specifically exhibits retrograde transsynaptic transfer in mice81.
Two additional possibilities exist which would not leverage WGA to achieve transsynaptic spread. AAV2 could infect M1 neurons at their axonal terminals in PMd and then be transported retrogradely back to the nuclei, leading to recombination and ChR2-eYFP expression if these neurons were co-infected by AAV8. Alternatively, AAV2 could infect PMd neurons and the entire AAV2 particle be transported anterogradely and released at axon terminals and taken up across the synapse by M1 neurons. This mode of anterograde transsynaptic transport has been observed for AAV2 in rats in nigrostriatal pathways56. However, as discussed above, reports of transsynaptic transduction via AAV directly (not mediated by WGA) are rare for cortico-cortical connections. Nevertheless, due to recombination, even a small amount of transduction of Cre could drive potentially expression of the opsin in M1 neurons, even if the mCherry reporter expression were too weak to generate a visible signal. More sensitive techniques (e.g. RNA FISH to detect mCherry transcripts) could be used to detect this means of transduction, which would result in different anatomic specificity. In these cases, both promoters would conjunctively gate expression in the dually transfected M1 neurons, as opposed to one promoter gating expression in M1 neurons and the other expression in connected PMd neurons.
Dual-viral strategies like this enable new classes of experiments which require precise manipulation of specific circuit pathways27. Moreover, these methods can be combined with cell-type specific promoters to achieve additional precision by restricting expression to the intersection of multiple genetically and anatomically defined cell types82,83. Of course, a caveat of this approach is that transsynaptic transport may vary across neural circuits; therefore this dual-vector targeting approach should be validated for each experimental system in which it is employed40. Our results validate the use of WGA-Cre to drive opsin expression in reciprocal M1 projections to premotor cortex, which can be used to probe the functional role of these feedback pathways during the preparation and execution of reaching movements.
Precise targeting of specific anatomically defined circuit elements is particularly important for primate neuroscience, where fewer cell-type specific promoter sequences have been established16. Projection targeting strategies can enable researchers to dissect neural computations into functional neural circuit components and to establish the causal contribution of different anatomical pathways to complex behavior. Projection targeting approaches may also prove particularly effective in modulating behavior in circuits14 where broad, regional modulation has proven less effective19,84,85,86.
We were not successful in one attempt to use LT-HSV to deliver Cre transsynaptically to facilitate expression of a Cre-dependent opsin transgene. Others have reported successful viral transfection over short (<14 days) timescales using LT-HSV in rhesus striatum87, suggesting that our results may relate to a number of factors including the duration of expression, the viral titer, or the injection protocol, or may be specific to LT-HSV use in neocortex or in squirrel monkeys. In such circumstances, alternative retrograde viruses such as recombinant pseudorabies virus (PRV)88 or helper-dependent canine adenovirus (CAV-2)89 could be explored as an alternative to LT-HSV, for certain situations and expression timelines.
High-fidelity optically-evoked spiking
To test the functionality of expressed opsins, we developed a portable electrophysiology cart to optically stimulate and electrically record single neurons in anesthetized squirrel monkeys in an operating room. Using this system, we confirmed that optical stimulation in vivo robustly drove spiking responses in neurons transfected with ChR2(H134R) and C1V1(TT). We show that single neuron and multiunit spiking activity can be reliably evoked optically. We also found that the multiunit firing rate in squirrel monkeys can track sinusoidally modulated “carrier” signals. The ability to amplify or suppress endogenous oscillatory rhythms may prove therapeutically useful for treating certain neurological disorders49 and might shed insight on the computational roles of oscillatory dynamics (e.g.90).
Optically-evoked responses could be sustained for at least 90 minutes during repeated stimulation with continuous and pulsed light. Furthermore, the responses closely resembled light-evoked responses in optogenetically transfected macaque cortical neurons6. It has been noted previously that firing rates in some brain regions may exhibit substantially lower firing rates in rodents than in primates91. The fidelity of spiking responses to optical stimulation depends not only on the kinetics of the opsin protein, but also on expression patterns and strength, the biophysical characteristics of the cells being stimulated, and the network dynamics of the neural populations being stimulated43,92. Consequently, there may be considerable differences in optically-evoked responses between rodent and primate neural circuits. This underscores that New World primates are likely a closer functional approximation than rodents to the effect of optogenetic manipulation on rhesus, and perhaps human, neuronal firing patterns.
We note, however, that our recordings were conducted under isoflurane anesthesia which impacts cortical activity. In particular, isoflurane suppresses cortical firing rates, which prevented us from validating the hyperpolarizing opsins in vivo. Validation of these constructs will require future experiments which use a different anesthetic protocol which preserves spontaneous firing (e.g. using pentobarbital), which combine optogenetic excitation and inhibition in the same region, or in which photostimulation is performed in awake subjects. We anticipate that the precise evoked spiking activity would also differ as a function of many experimental parameters, including the viral titer used, the brain region injected, the level of opsin expression, the cell types being targeted and recorded from, and the parameters of photostimulation. Consequently, optical responses should be functionally validated via simultaneous electrophysiology in any particular experiment to validate the evoked responses.
Long-term safety and efficacy of optogenetic constructs
Optogenetic manipulations of neural circuits show promise in helping to disentangle the pathology of psychiatric disorders, including depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anhedonia, anxiety, etc. (reviewed in28). However, an important step in this direction is establishing the long-term viability and safety of optogenetic constructs in a primate model. In four squirrel monkeys and three rhesus macaques, viral transfection of optogenetic constructs did not lead to any adverse health effects through at least one full year, as assessed using a combination of MR imaging, blood tests, and post-mortem histology. Furthermore, the injected opsins continued to express for at least one year in both squirrel monkeys and in rhesus macaques, and that optically-evoked spiking activity remained robust at least a full year with no significant reduction in efficacy over time.
Motivation and outlook for optogenetics in squirrel monkeys and other primates
Within systems neuroscience, the rapid expansion of genetically-encoded, optogenetic tools has enabled targeted, functional manipulations across the phylogenetic tree40,93,94,95. These tools enable optical control of specific neuron types or circuit projections, enabling researchers to probe neural circuits in healthy and disease states28. Rodent models have so far benefited most abundantly; however, there is strong motivation to apply these tools in primates due to the richness and precision of primate behavior and to the translational relevance afforded by the homology between human and nonhuman primate brains1,2. For more complex, cognitively demanding behaviors beyond the repertoire of rodents or for translational questions where homology with the human brain is paramount, understanding neural circuits in primates is critical. The addition of optogenetic tools and viral targeting strategies to the primate toolkit will aid researchers in understanding the complex, neural computations which underlie perception, sophisticated cognition and decision making, and dextrous motor behavior across the primate lineage.
Squirrel monkeys are a long-established model system in biomedical research, utilized for decades to study learning and memory96,97,98, olfaction99, vision100, behavioral pharmacology101,102, addiction103,104, social behavior105,106, stress-induced physiological changes107,108, aging and protein aggregation109, Parkinson’s disease110, and other human diseases111. Their relatively large brains (Fig. 1a) display similar functional organization to rhesus monkeys and humans112,113,114, and researchers have leveraged this homology to study the neurophysiology of the vestibular system115,116,117, sleep118, audition119,120, vocalization121,122,123, motor control124, and many other neuroscientific questions.
We discuss four specific scientific opportunities afforded by the use of optogenetic tools within squirrel monkeys. First, within the particular context of motor control, we envision many long-standing lines of scientific inquiry where optogenetic tools would likely yield new insight. Squirrel monkeys possess a pseudo-opposable thumb for gripping objects and a central sulcus dividing functionally organized primary motor and somatosensory cortices. This biomechanical homology and similarities in functional organization facilitate straightforward comparison with homologous regions in rhesus macaques. Additionally, the somatosensory and motor systems in squirrel monkeys have been well mapped using microelectrode arrays, intrinsic signal imaging, and functional MRI124,125,126,127,128,129,130. Intracortical and subcortical connections among these areas have also been explored using retrograde and anterograde tracing techniques125,129,131,132. Optogenetic manipulations would facilitate functional dissection of these regions and their contributions to hand and limb movements. For example, spatially localized optogenetic inhibition could be used to instantaneously shutdown the contribution of Area 5, S1, M1, PMd, or PMv during the preparation and execution of reaching and grasping movements. Leveraging the anterograde transduction observed for the opsins we tested, injection in one region and optically exciting or suppressing downstream axonal terminals could be used to test the functional contributions of the many interconnections between these regions. For example, activating or suppressing the parietal reach region to M1 and PMd during reaching movements could elucidate the processes of state estimation and visual feedback that guide reaching movements. Similarly, optogenetic manipulation of cerebellar projections to thalamus, thalamocortical projections to M1, or reciprocal projections between 3a and M1 would inform models of how proprioceptive information is transformed by motor cortex during online feedback control133,134.
Second, changes to the functional organization have been characterized subsequent to injury due to local infarct135,136,137, cortical injury138,139, and dorsal column spinal cord lesions140,141,142,143. Nevertheless, characterization of this remapping is typically limited to passive observation of motor representations. Temporally precise and anatomically targeted causal manipulations would greatly enhance our functional understanding of the mechanisms of cortical remapping following injury.
Third, while squirrel monkeys are a long-established model in their own right within motor control and other neuroscientific domains, the scientific utility of optogenetic tools in squirrel monkeys also lies in providing causal tools for functional comparative neuroanatomy. Comparative efforts are greatly accelerated by concomitant developments in other primates, notably rhesus macaques and marmosets. Impressive recent progress has been made towards translating optogenetic tools to rhesus macaques (reviewed in19,144,145) and marmosets7. Macaques display close neuroanatomical homology with humans and are readily trained to perform a wide variety of cognitively sophisticated tasks. In macaques, some behavioral effects of stimulation have been surprisingly modest6,12,13,19,84,86, although notable effects have been reported, particularly when stimulating sensory areas8,9,10,11 and when specific circuit projections14 or cell types15 were targeted. This body of work underscores the need to develop refined targeting strategies to better understand the nuanced interaction between optogenetic manipulations and the endogenous circuit dynamics that leads to behavioral modification. Progress with viral tools for neural circuit targeting and manipulation has also recently been reported in the common marmoset, whose reproductive characteristics afford the creation of transgenic models that open a rich experimental landscape both in basic science and translational research146,147. As novel transgenic marmoset lines are developed146,148,149 and advanced tools for genome editing become widely available150, marmosets offer an attractive, complementary platform for combining genetic targeting, neuroanatomical mapping, awake-behaving neurophysiology, and sophisticated behavioral control151,152,153,154,155. Moreover, AAV can efficiently transfect neurons in marmosets53 and excitatory and inhibitory opsins readily express7.
To date, the vast majority of this comparative research has been histological (e.g.129,156,157,158,159,160,161), though additional techniques including electrophysiological recording, intracortical microstimulation, lesions, TMS, and functional MRI have been used to probe the differences among the nervous systems of New World and Old World primates and humans (e.g.128,131,162,163,164). By extending optogenetic tools to additional primate species, functional manipulations can be brought to bear on comparative analysis of neural organization among the primate lineages. It would be of particular interest to revisit the evolutionary differences in the corticospinal tract observed among New World and Old World primates. Moving from marmosets to squirrel monkeys to Cebus monkeys to macaques, one observes a progressively larger cortico-motorneuronal tract (comprised of motor cortical neurons that directly excite lower motor neurons in the ventral horn of the spinal cord), as well as a progressively greater hand dexterity and capacity for relatively independent finger movements129,161,163,164,165. However, the functional significance of different contributions to the corticospinal tract and other descending motor pathways remains unclear; this body comparative work is largely correlative in nature. A notable exception was recently reported by Kinoshita and colleagues166, who leveraged targeted, reversible expression of tetanus toxin to demonstrate that the phylogenetically “older” oligosynaptic pathway to motor neurons is still required for dextrous grasping in macaques. Targeted optogenetic manipulation of the descending motor pathways could definitively establish the relative functional contribution of descending pathways across primate species and their relationship to dextrous motor behaviors. Parallel efforts in multiple primate species will likely inform our understanding of neural structure and function in each species individually as well as within the larger evolutionary context.
Due to the considerable differences between rodents and humans, application of new tools for circuit neuroscience in primate models is essential to advancing our understanding of the human brain and of brain disorders1. This study highlights the potential for precise optical manipulation of specific circuits in squirrel monkeys, a well-established model in biomedical science, featuring close anatomical, behavioral, and genetic homology with macaques and humans. While the optimal viruses, promoters, proteins, and targeting strategies employed will likely vary with context, novel elements of the toolkit for optogenetic manipulation developed here for squirrel monkeys will likely translate to other New World primates and to rhesus macaques, enabling similar strategies for projection targeting and high-fidelity optical control. In parallel with rhesus macaques, New World primate models can facilitate the translation of an ever-growing collection of precision tools available for circuit manipulation and interrogation95, presenting an exceptional opportunity to dissect neural circuit function and disease.
Methods In Brief
All procedures followed approved Stanford University IACUC protocols. Optogenetic protocols are described online at the Optogenetics Resource Center, http://www.stanford.edu/group/dlab/optogenetics/. Injections: Twelve adult female squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus) were anesthetized with ketamine and isoflurane and then relocated to an operating room where sterile surgical practices were followed. Opsin constructs were injected stereotactically using a microsyringe pump system. Three rhesus macaques were injected using a standard electrophysiology microdrive and custom injection system while awake in a primate chair. Recording: After at least six weeks post-injection, 4 squirrel monkeys were re-anesthetized for intraoperative optical stimulation and electrophysiological recording using hand-built fiber optrodes connected to a portable multichannel recording and laser stimulation cart. Anesthetized recording procedures were followed immediately by perfusion. Rhesus macaques were stimulated via a custom coaxial recoding/stimulation optrode167 while awake in a primate neurophysiology rig. Perfusion and Histology: All animals were deeply anesthetized with ketamine and isoflurane, euthanized with Beuthanasia, and then perfused with heparinized ice-cold PBS and 4% paraformaldehyde. Histological sections were prepared in standard fashion, stained, and imaged using confocal laser microscopy.
Methods
All experiments were approved by the Stanford University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and the Stanford University Administrative Panel on Biosafety.
Virus production
Standard protocols were used to produce viral vectors and viruses (see http://optogenetics.org). AAVs (1–4 * 1012 genome copies per mL) were packaged by the University of North Carolina viral vector core. All viruses had been tested in rodents and expression was assessed by standard histological measurements before injecting them into monkeys. The majority of our injections used AAV2/5, which refers to a pseudotyped AAV that combines the genome of AAV2 with the capsid of AAV5 to improve transduction efficiency and neural tropism (https://www.addgene.org/viral-vectors/aav/aav-guide/). By convention, the pseudotyped AAV is referred to by its capsid component (i.e. AAV2/2 is referred to as AAV2, AAV 2/5 is referred to as AAV5 and AAV2/8 is referred to as AAV8) and is assumed to have the same tropism/spread within brain tissue. For WGA-Cre projection targeting constructs, we employed AAV2/2 (AAV2) and AAV2/8 (AAV8) to combine two different serotypes within a single brain, with the EF1α promoter responsible for driving strong expression of Cre (and therefore AAV2 was persumed drive sufficient expression). One injection was also performed with LT-HSV47.
Virus injections and targeting
Squirrel monkeys
Twelve adult female squirrel monkeys (Saimiri sciureus sciureus) between 10–18 years old (mean 13.6 ± 2.6 std. dev. years) were sedated with ketamine and 0.5–4% isoflurane. One or more relatively large rectangular craniotomies were performed over stereotactically-defined injection sites under sterile conditions. A stereotactic positioner (Kopf Instruments) was used to advance a 100-μl syringe (1710TLL; Hamilton) and a 32-gauge injection needle (Hamilton Company) to a depth of 3 mm beyond dura. Injections of 1 μl were made every 1 mm at a rate of 100 nl/min, controlled by a programmable syringe pump (World Precision Instruments). At least 6 weeks post-injection were allowed to enable opsin expression, based on rodent and rhesus expression times6. We housed the squirrel monkeys for a few days post-surgery in an adjacent but separate cage and then returned them to their group home cages.
We used interaural stereotactic coordinates to target each injection to one of primary somatosensory cortex (S1), primary motor cortex (M1), dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), or parietal cortex. The large craniotomies exposed the relatively translucent dura and facilitated visualization of the central sulcus and nearby sulcal fiducials. S1 and M1 were targeted posterior and anterior to the central sulcus respectively. The parietal injection was targeted near the parietal sulcus and the PMd injections were targeted relative to the central and arcuate sulci and the precentral dimple. The injection locations were also validated histologically. We validated that S1 and M1 injections were located on the postcentral and precentral gyri and that parietal cortex was located near the parietal sulcus. PMd was validated to lie 11–15 mm anterior to the central sulcus but posterior to the arcuate sulcus. We were not able to functionally validate PMd using intracortical microstimulation (i.e. higher thresholds to evoke movement than in M1) or electrophysiologically (e.g. higher proportion of neurons displaying robust preparatory activity in instructed delay reaching tasks). However, we did note a reduction in the proportion of large neurons in layer 5 (likely Betz cells) in the targeted PMd relative to M1157. Examples of M1 Betz cells are shown in Figs 1e and 4a.
Rhesus macaques
Three adult rhesus macaque monkeys (Macaca mulatta), one female (rhesus monkey D) and two males (rhesus monkeys Q and O), ranging in age from 6–15 years, were implanted under isoflurane anesthesia with a recording cylinder perpendicular to the skull over primary motor and premotor cortex. In monkeys D and O, multiple small craniotomies were made within the cylinder; in monkey Q, a full craniotomy was performed. In all cases, the dura was left intact. During the following days, we injected virus using an adapted microinfusion system168 as described in6. A hydraulic micromanipulator (Narishige Group) lowered the needles through a guide tube attached to a Crist grid and injections of 1 μl were made every 1 mm. After injecting at each depth, we waited 10 min before moving deeper. Following completion of the deepest injection (6–10 mm depth), the micromanipulator withdrew the injection needle at a speed of 1–4 mm/min. Injections were made in up to 14 locations within each monkey’s cylinder with at least 1–2 mm of separation between adjacent sites.
We used interaural stereotactic coordinates to target each injection to M1 and/or PMd (Supp. Table 1). We derived these coordinates via consultation with histological atlases and with previously validated coordinates used in prior surgeries. We extensively validated these regions electrophysiologically during reaching tasks. Both M1 and PMd exhibited modulation during reaching over time and across reach directions. Both areas were reliably modulated by palpation of the contralateral upper arm and shoulder. PMd exhibited more preparatory activity in advance of movement. Using intracortical microstimulation (333 Hz biphasic pulses, c.f.169), M1 exhibited markedly lower thresholds (10 uA to 50 uA) to evoke movement than PMd (70 uA to 180 uA), but eye movements were not evoked.
Optical stimulation and neural recordings
Squirrel monkeys
Four squirrel monkeys were sedated with ketamine and anesthetized with isoflurane and placed in a stereotax. Craniotomies were reopened under sterile conditions over the previous injection sites. We constructed optrodes which were 200 μm flat-cut optical fibers (Thorlabs) glued to high-impedance (3–7 MΩ) tungsten electrodes (Serial number UEWLGCSEEN1E, Frederick Haer) with the electrode tip leading the fiber by 100–400 μm). Optrodes were advanced using a stereotactic positioner (David Kopf Instruments). Optical stimulation and electrophysiology were performed using a custom-built mobile electrophysiology rig built on a rolling cart (Bretford Manufacturing). See Supp. Fig. 4 for component schematic. Optical stimulation was computer controlled using a Simulink real-time xPC target system, which triggered laser stimulation pulses via a digital-to-analog card (National Instruments) that controlled a blue (473 nm, Sanctity, SVL-473-0100), green (561 nm, CrystaLasers, CL-2000), or red (534 nm, CrystaLasers, DL-635) laser in analog mode. Electrode signals were recorded using the Cerebus system (Blackrock Microsystems).
We advanced the electrode while pulsing the stimulating laser for 2 ms at a rate of 1 Hz. This facilitated the detection of optogenetically-evoked spiking activity at the electrode. While light-responsive single- and multi-units were readily recorded at the electrode, this inherently biased sample of neuronal responses precludes quantification of the fraction of light-responsive units in the region near the injection site. For computing evoked spike counts during pulsed stimulation, as in Fig. 5c,d, a spike was counted as being evoked by a particular laser pulse if it occurred in a window beginning at laser onset and extending 7.5 ms forwards in time. This window was selected to be nearly as large as possible while avoiding overlap for successive pulses with 130 Hz stimulation so that the same evoked spiking window could be employed for all stimulation frequencies.
For extended stimulation with pulse trains, 50 Hz trains of 2 ms pulses were delivered for 5 sec spaced with 10 sec pauses, for a total of 360 repetitions over the 90-minute experiment, or 60 repetitions per 15-minute epoch. For extended stimulation with continuous pulses, 200 ms pulses were delivered spaced with 800 ms pauses, for a total of 5400 repetitions over the 90-minute experiment, or 900 repetitions in each 15-minute epoch. Laser power was fixed at 3 mW (95.5 mW/mm2) for the duration of both experiments. Electrophysiological responses were quantified using custom MATLAB analysis code. Spike trains were smoothed with either a 10 ms Gaussian filter (for frequency modulation) or a 20 ms Gaussian filter and then averaged over trials. Spike counts during stimulation were compared to pre-stimulation time periods using the non-parametric Wilcoxon signed-rank test for paired samples. Changes in spike counts evoked by continuous vs. pulsed stimulation were compared using the non-parametric rank-sum test for unpaired samples.
Frequency modulation stimulation patterns were generated as follows: first, the pulse rate as a function of time was specified to jump from 0 Hz to 80 Hz (the center frequency) and persisted at 80 Hz for 1 second to allow onset transients to decay. After 1 second, frequency modulation varied the pulse rate sinusoidally between 30 and 130 Hz at a signal frequency determined by the condition, ranging from 1–14 Hz. After 3 seconds of frequency modulation, another 1 second of 80 Hz constant pulse rate followed, and then the pulse rate returned to 0. We then used this pulse rate timeseries as the average rate of a highly regular gamma process of order 40 from which we generated the pulse times on each trial.
Rhesus macaques
Optogenetic stimulation in rhesus monkeys Q and O differed in that all stimulation was done with awake monkeys comfortably seated in a primate chair within a dim, quiet neurophysiology rig. We utilized either hand-built optrodes (rhesus monkey Q) as described above or a custom coaxial optrode designed to minimize cortical damage167 (rhesus monkeys Q and O). The optrode was positioned over the injection location and lowered into cortex until background neural activity and optically-evoked responses from the local population could be detected in the voltage recordings. Stimulation occurred in the inter-trial intervals after a random subset of trials of a reaching task performed in the course of other experiments, during which time the monkeys were waiting passively for the next trial to begin. Stimulation was delivered at 3 mW (95.5 mW/mm2) as single 200 ms continuous pulses at 561 nm (CrystaLasers, CL-2000). We measured the average firing rate of single or multiunit activity recorded on the optrode by counting spikes in the 200 ms stimulation window and over repeated stimulated and non-stimulated trials. We computed the difference in firing rate between stimulated and non-stimulated trials and computed 95% confidence intervals from the Student’s T distribution purely for display purposes. To test whether the size of optically-evoked changes in firing rates was changing over time, we performed a least-squares linear regression fit to the change in firing rate vs. days from injection. The 95% confidence intervals on the coefficients were generated from the F-distribution.
Both squirrel monkeys and rhesus macaques
Electrode voltages were unity-gain buffered at a head stage near the recording electrode and then filtered using the Cerebus “spike medium” filter (250 Hz 4-pole high-pass filter). We ensured monitored noise levels on the electrode and ensured that the RMS noise voltage was below 10 µV at all times, using appropriate grounding, referencing, and EMI shielding techniques. High-pass filtered spike signals were then thresholded online using a threshold which was set manually to isolate the waveforms of an individual neuron (single unit) or collection of several neurons (multi-unit) from the noise. This threshold was always at least> 4x RMS or <−4x RMS to ignore background noise or poorly isolated neural “hash”. We did not include data from any single or multi-unit waveforms which were not reliably isolated from the noise for the duration of the procedure. In some cases, the isolated spiking waveforms were separated into multiple individual single units using time-amplitude windows (Plexon Offline Sorter). The single unit and multi-unit examples included were selected on the basis of optical responsiveness. Stimulation paradigms were designed using MATLAB (Mathworks). Laser power at fiber tip was set to 0.5–5 mW as measured with a power meter (Thorlabs). Pulse trains ranged in frequency from 20 Hz to 130 Hz and used 2 ms pulses. Continuous pulses lasted for 200–400 ms.
When stimulating in ChR2(H134R)-transfected regions, we also employed red-wavelength control stimulation to verify that recorded responses were due to optogenetic modulation and not artifactual. In only these control experiments, we set the threshold for spike detection liberally at 3x RMS voltage (24 μV). This threshold was closer to the electrical noise and much lower than what was used to isolate spiking neurons for non-control experiments. By recording the local neural “hash”, this enabled detection of minute changes in local neural activity, increasing the sensitivity of the control experiment to non-specific modulation by the laser itself. We compared the time-averaged firing rate during stimulation to each trial’s pre-stimulation baseline using a paired two-sided sign-rank test.
Structural MR Imaging
At least one year after virus injection, structural brain images from two squirrel monkeys were acquired on a General Electric Signa 3.0 Tesla system with protocols developed specifically for squirrel monkeys as described previously170. The monkeys were scanned under anesthesia induced by subcutaneous injection of 20 mg/kg ketamine hydrochloride, 4 mg/kg xylazine hydrochloride, and 0.04 mg/kg atropine sulfate. Body temperature was monitored and maintained within the normal range using a cushioned heat pad. Earplugs protected against scanner-generated noise. Three types of imaging sequences were acquired per monkey: a T1-weighted 3D IR-FSPGR (TR/TE/TI 8.3/2.8/500 ms), a T2-weighted FAST SPIN ECHO sequence (T2 FSE) (TR/TE 3200/206.6 ms) and a T2-FLAIR sequence (TR/TE 6000/180.9 ms). All scans were acquired in the coronal plane, with field of view 8 cm, matrix 256 × 256, voxel size 0.31 × 0.31 × 0.5 mm. Images were digitally resliced in the sagittal plane for presentation. Inversion recovery prepared protocols, such as the 3D T1-SPGR sequence acquired in this study, have been previously shown to maximize gray versus white matter contrast171.
Histology and imaging
At least 6 weeks post-injection, squirrel monkeys and rhesus macaques were deeply anesthetized with ketamine and isoflurane, euthanized with Beuthanasia, then perfused with heparinized ice-cold PBS followed by ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde. Extracted brains and spinal cords were fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde and transferred to 30% sucrose solution for 48–72 hours at 4 °C. Brains and spinal cord were sectioned into blocks and frozen. 40 μm thick sections were then cut on a freezing microtome (Leica SM2000R) and preserved in cryoprotectant (25% glycerol and 30% ethylene glycol in PBS) at 4 °C. Sections were processed using standard immunohistochemical procedures previously reported in6,172. In brief, sections were incubated overnight at 4 °C with the primary antibodies rabbit anti-CaMKIIα 1:50 (Santa Cruz), mouse anti-NeuN 1:500 (Millipore) and/or rabbit anti-GFAP 1:500 (Millipore), in PBS with 0.01% Triton X-100 (wt/vol) and 3% normal donkey serum (wt/vol). Sections were then washed in PBS and incubated in secondary antibodies (1:1000) conjugated to Cy3, Cy5, Alexa 647, Alexa 594, or DAPI (Jackson Immuno Research) for three hours at room temperature in PBS with 0.01% Triton X-100 (wt/vol) and 3% normal donkey serum (wt/vol). Sections were washed in PBS and incubated in DAPI (1:50,000) for 30 mins, then washed again and mounted on slides with PVA-DABCO. Fluorescence images were acquired using a Leica TCS SP5 confocal scanning laser microscope with 10x air and 40x/1.4 NA oil objectives. Large field coronal images were collected using either a 10x, 20x, or 40x objective, tiling stage control, and stitched together in software (Fiji). For each slice, we stained for DAPI and/or NeuN and/or GFAP to address specific questions about neural tropism and toxicity of the viral serotype/promoter/opsin used.
In the vicinity of the injection site, the coronal slice with the brightest fluorescence was selected to demonstrate the expression. In a few cases, the same opsin/promoter combination was injected into more than one squirrel monkey. We included images of the first squirrel monkey for whom histology was performed. In rare cases where difficulties with perfusion, slicing, or staining negatively impacted the integrity of the brain slices or the quality of the fluorescent stain, we selected an alternative slice, possibly from another squirrel monkey injected with the same construct.
Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Change history
05 December 2019
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Aguayo, M. Mazariegos, C. Buckmaster, C. Darien-Smith, and A. Lilak for expert veterinary care and surgical and anesthesia support, J. Henderson for helpful discussions and surgical guidance, M. Sahani for helpful discussions regarding optical stimuli, B. Oskotsky for technical support, and B. Davis for administrative support. This work was supported by the Michael J. Fox foundation (P.K., K.V.S., K.D.), the US National Science Foundation graduate research fellowship (D.J.O., M.T.K.), the Stanford Graduate Fellowship (D.J.O., E.F., W.G.), IIE/Fulbright International Science and Technology PhD Fellowship (E.F.), the Gerald J. Lieberman Fellowship (E.F.), the Stanford Medical Scientist Training Program of the National Institutes of Health T32GM007365 (B.H.), the Stanford Bio-X interdisciplinary graduate fellowship (B.H.), a NIH NINDS K99/R00 award (K99NS092972; C.C.), BrainLinks-BrainTools Cluster of Excellence funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG, grant number EXC 1086, I.D.), the Bernstein Award 2012 sponsored by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grant no. 01GQ1301, I.D.), the ERC Starting Grant OptoMotorPath (I.D.), as well as the German Research Foundation (DFG, grant number DI 1908/5-1 and DI 1908/6-1, I.D.), the Department of Bioengineering (C.R.), the NIH Director’s Pioneer Award 1DP1OD006409 (K.V.S.), and US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency REPAIR N66001-10-C-2010 (K.V.S., K.D.).
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D.J.O., P.K., E.F., I.D., K.D. and K.V.S. conceived and designed the experiments. D.J.O. wrote the manuscript and all authors contributed to its editing. C.R. designed and cloned the hThy1 and hSyn constructs and prepared all viral constructs. D.J.O., P.K., E.F., C.C., I.D. performed squirrel monkey viral injections. D.J.O. constructed the portable electrophysiology cart. D.J.O. and M.T.K. designed the optical stimuli. D.J.O., P.K., E.F., W.G. and C.C. performed optical stimulation and electrophysiology in squirrel monkeys. E.F. performed MR imaging. K.Y. reviewed the MR images for pathological features. D.J.O., P.K., E.F., I.D. and B.H. performed squirrel monkey histology. D.J.O., W.G. and I.D. performed all rhesus macaque viral injections. D.J.O. and W.G. performed all rhesus macaque optical stimulation and recording. D.J.O., E.F., S.I.R. and I.D. performed rhesus macaque perfusions. E.F., B.H., W.G. and I.D. performed rhesus macaque histology. K.D. and K.V.S. supervised all aspects of the work.
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O’Shea, D.J., Kalanithi, P., Ferenczi, E.A. et al. Development of an optogenetic toolkit for neural circuit dissection in squirrel monkeys. Sci Rep 8, 6775 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24362-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24362-7
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