

Physicists and bioengineers have developed an optical instrument allowing them to control the behaviour of a worm just by shining a tightly focused beam of light at individual neurones inside the organism.
The pioneering optogenetic research, by a team at Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Massachusetts Medical School, is described this week in the journal Nature Methods. Their device is known as the CoLBeRT (Controlling Locomotion and Behaviour in Real Time) system for optical control of freely moving animals, in this case the millimetre-long worm Caenorhabditis elegans.
'This optical instrument allows us to commandeer the nervous system of swimming or crawling nematodes using pulses of blue and green light - no wires, no electrodes,' says Aravinthan D.T. Samuel, a professor of physics and affiliate of Harvard's Centre for Brain Science. 'We can activate or inactivate individual neurones or muscle cells, essentially turning the worm into a virtual biorobot.'
Samuel and colleagues chose to work with C. elegans, an organism often used in biological research, because of its optical transparency, its well-defined nervous system of exactly 302 neurones, and its ease of manipulation. They genetically modified the worms so their neurones express the light-activated proteins channelrhodopsin-2 and halorhodopsin.
In conjunction with high-precision micromirrors that can direct laser light to individual cells, the scientists were then able to stimulate - using blue light - or inhibit - using green light - behaviours such as locomotion and egg-laying.
'If you shine blue light at a particular neurone near the front end of the worm, it perceives that as being touched and will back away,' says co-author Andrew M. Leifer, a Ph.D. student in Harvard's Department of Physics and Centre for Brain Science. 'Similarly, blue light shined at the tail end of the modified worm will prompt it to move forward.'
The scientists were also able to use pulses of light to steer the worms left or right. By stimulating neurones associated with the worm's reproductive system, they were even able to rouse the animal into secreting an egg.
Key to the CoLBeRT system is a tracking microscope recording the motion of a swimming or crawling worm, paired with image processing software that can quickly estimate the location of individual neurones and instruct a digital micromirror device to illuminate targeted cells. Because cells in an unrestrained worm represent a rapidly moving target, the system can capture 50 frames per second and attain spatial resolution of just 30 microns.
'This development should have profound consequences in systems neuroscience as a new tool to probe nervous system activity and behaviour, as well as in bioengineering and biorobotics,' Samuel says. 'Our laboratory has been pioneering new optical methods to study the nervous system, and this is the latest, and perhaps our greatest, invention.'
Chirps made by hummingbird are actually created by its tail
Whirligig beetle named after the music legend Roy Orbison
Pathogenicity of Toxoplasma gondii under control of a plant hormone
Cornell patents a pink lily look-alike that blooms all summer