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Dive into the research topics where Jordan G. McCall is active.

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Featured researches published by Jordan G. McCall.


Science | 2013

Injectable, Cellular-Scale Optoelectronics with Applications for Wireless Optogenetics

Tae-Il Kim; Jordan G. McCall; Yei Hwan Jung; Xian Huang; Edward R. Siuda; Yuhang Li; Jizhou Song; Young Min Song; Hsuan An Pao; Rak Hwan Kim; Chaofeng Lu; Sung Dan Lee; Il Sun Song; Gunchul Shin; Ream Al-Hasani; Stanley Kim; Meng Peun Tan; Yonggang Huang; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; John A. Rogers; Michael R. Bruchas

The Smaller, the Better New semiconductor device technology enables injection of light-emitting diodes, silicon devices, actuators, and sensors at precisely controlled locations within biological tissues, such as the brain. Kim et al. (p. 211) show how wireless control of animal models using these technologies and the techniques of optogenetics provide new insights into basic behavioral neuroscience. Miniaturized and implantable light-emitting diodes offer precise and flexible control of neurons, when used in combination with optogenetics. Successful integration of advanced semiconductor devices with biological systems will accelerate basic scientific discoveries and their translation into clinical technologies. In neuroscience generally, and in optogenetics in particular, the ability to insert light sources, detectors, sensors, and other components into precise locations of the deep brain yields versatile and important capabilities. Here, we introduce an injectable class of cellular-scale optoelectronics that offers such features, with examples of unmatched operational modes in optogenetics, including completely wireless and programmed complex behavioral control over freely moving animals. The ability of these ultrathin, mechanically compliant, biocompatible devices to afford minimally invasive operation in the soft tissues of the mammalian brain foreshadow applications in other organ systems, with potential for broad utility in biomedical science and engineering.


Nature | 2016

Bioresorbable silicon electronic sensors for the brain

Seung-Kyun Kang; Rory K.J. Murphy; Suk Won Hwang; Seung Min Lee; Daniel V. Harburg; Neil A. Krueger; Jiho Shin; Paul Gamble; Huanyu Cheng; Sooyoun Yu; Zhuangjian Liu; Jordan G. McCall; Manu Stephen; Hanze Ying; Jeonghyun Kim; Gayoung Park; R. Chad Webb; Chi Hwan Lee; Sangjin Chung; Dae Seung Wie; Amit D. Gujar; Bharat Vemulapalli; Albert H. Kim; Kyung Mi Lee; Jianjun Cheng; Younggang Huang; Sang Hoon Lee; Paul V. Braun; Wilson Z. Ray; John A. Rogers

Many procedures in modern clinical medicine rely on the use of electronic implants in treating conditions that range from acute coronary events to traumatic injury. However, standard permanent electronic hardware acts as a nidus for infection: bacteria form biofilms along percutaneous wires, or seed haematogenously, with the potential to migrate within the body and to provoke immune-mediated pathological tissue reactions. The associated surgical retrieval procedures, meanwhile, subject patients to the distress associated with re-operation and expose them to additional complications. Here, we report materials, device architectures, integration strategies, and in vivo demonstrations in rats of implantable, multifunctional silicon sensors for the brain, for which all of the constituent materials naturally resorb via hydrolysis and/or metabolic action, eliminating the need for extraction. Continuous monitoring of intracranial pressure and temperature illustrates functionality essential to the treatment of traumatic brain injury; the measurement performance of our resorbable devices compares favourably with that of non-resorbable clinical standards. In our experiments, insulated percutaneous wires connect to an externally mounted, miniaturized wireless potentiostat for data transmission. In a separate set-up, we connect a sensor to an implanted (but only partially resorbable) data-communication system, proving the principle that there is no need for any percutaneous wiring. The devices can be adapted to sense fluid flow, motion, pH or thermal characteristics, in formats that are compatible with the body’s abdomen and extremities, as well as the deep brain, suggesting that the sensors might meet many needs in clinical medicine.


Cell | 2015

Wireless Optofluidic Systems for Programmable In Vivo Pharmacology and Optogenetics

Jae Woong Jeong; Jordan G. McCall; Gunchul Shin; Yihui Zhang; Ream Al-Hasani; Minku Kim; Shuo Li; Joo Yong Sim; Kyung In Jang; Yan Shi; Daniel Y. Hong; Yuhao Liu; Gavin P. Schmitz; Li Xia; Zhubin He; Paul Gamble; Wilson Z. Ray; Yonggang Huang; Michael R. Bruchas; John A. Rogers

In vivo pharmacology and optogenetics hold tremendous promise for dissection of neural circuits, cellular signaling, and manipulating neurophysiological systems in awake, behaving animals. Existing neural interface technologies, such as metal cannulas connected to external drug supplies for pharmacological infusions and tethered fiber optics for optogenetics, are not ideal for minimally invasive, untethered studies on freely behaving animals. Here, we introduce wireless optofluidic neural probes that combine ultrathin, soft microfluidic drug delivery with cellular-scale inorganic light-emitting diode (μ-ILED) arrays. These probes are orders of magnitude smaller than cannulas and allow wireless, programmed spatiotemporal control of fluid delivery and photostimulation. We demonstrate these devices in freely moving animals to modify gene expression, deliver peptide ligands, and provide concurrent photostimulation with antagonist drug delivery to manipulate mesoaccumbens reward-related behavior. The minimally invasive operation of these probes forecasts utility in other organ systems and species, with potential for broad application in biomedical science, engineering, and medicine.


Nature Protocols | 2013

Fabrication and application of flexible, multimodal light-emitting devices for wireless optogenetics

Jordan G. McCall; Tae-Il Kim; Gunchul Shin; Xian Huang; Yei Hwan Jung; Ream Al-Hasani; Fiorenzo G. Omenetto; Michael R. Bruchas; John A. Rogers

The rise of optogenetics provides unique opportunities to advance materials and biomedical engineering, as well as fundamental understanding in neuroscience. This protocol describes the fabrication of optoelectronic devices for studying intact neural systems. Unlike optogenetic approaches that rely on rigid fiber optics tethered to external light sources, these novel devices carry wirelessly powered microscale, inorganic light-emitting diodes (μ-ILEDs) and multimodal sensors inside the brain. We describe the technical procedures for construction of these devices, their corresponding radiofrequency power scavengers and their implementation in vivo for experimental application. In total, the timeline of the procedure, including device fabrication, implantation and preparation to begin in vivo experimentation, can be completed in ∼3–8 weeks. Implementation of these devices allows for chronic (tested for up to 6 months) wireless optogenetic manipulation of neural circuitry in animals navigating complex natural or home-cage environments, interacting socially, and experiencing other freely moving behaviors.


Neuron | 2015

Distinct Subpopulations of Nucleus Accumbens Dynorphin Neurons Drive Aversion and Reward

Ream Al-Hasani; Jordan G. McCall; Gunchul Shin; Adrian M. Gomez; Gavin P. Schmitz; Julio M. Bernardi; Chang O. Pyo; Sung Il Park; Catherine M. Marcinkiewcz; Nicole A. Crowley; Michael J. Krashes; Bradford B. Lowell; Thomas L. Kash; John A. Rogers; Michael R. Bruchas

The nucleus accumbens (NAc) and the dynorphinergic system are widely implicated in motivated behaviors. Prior studies have shown that activation of the dynorphin-kappa opioid receptor (KOR) system leads to aversive, dysphoria-like behavior. However, the endogenous sources of dynorphin in these circuits remain unknown. We investigated whether dynorphinergic neuronal firing in the NAc is sufficient to induce aversive behaviors. We found that photostimulation of dynorphinergic cells in the ventral NAc shell elicits robust conditioned and real-time aversive behavior via KOR activation, and in contrast, photostimulation of dorsal NAc shell dynorphin cells induced a KOR-mediated place preference and was positively reinforcing. These results show previously unknown discrete subregions of dynorphin-containing cells in the NAc shell that selectively drive opposing behaviors. Understanding the discrete regional specificity by which NAc dynorphinerigic cells regulate preference and aversion provides insight into motivated behaviors that are dysregulated in stress, reward, and psychiatric disease.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2013

Locus Coeruleus Kappa-Opioid Receptors Modulate Reinstatement of Cocaine Place Preference Through a Noradrenergic Mechanism

Ream Al-Hasani; Jordan G. McCall; Audra M Foshage; Michael R. Bruchas

Activation of kappa-opioid receptors (KORs) in monoamine circuits results in dysphoria-like behaviors and stress-induced reinstatement of drug seeking in both conditioned place preference (CPP) and self-administration models. Noradrenergic (NA) receptor systems have also been implicated in similar behaviors. Dynorphinergic projections terminate within the locus coeruleus (LC), a primary source of norepinephrine in the forebrain, suggesting a possible link between the NA and dynorphin/kappa opioid systems, yet the implications of these putative interactions have not been investigated. We isolated the necessity of KORs in the LC in kappa opioid agonist (U50,488)-induced reinstatement of cocaine CPP by blocking KORs in the LC with NorBNI (KOR antagonist). KOR-induced reinstatement was significantly attenuated in mice injected with NorBNI in the LC. To determine the sufficiency of KORs in the LC on U50,488-induced reinstatement of cocaine CPP, we virally re-expressed KORs in the LC of KOR knockout mice. We found that KORs expression in the LC alone was sufficient to partially rescue KOR-induced reinstatement. Next we assessed the role of NA signaling in KOR-induced reinstatement of cocaine CPP in the presence and absence of a α2-agonist (clonidine), β-adrenergic receptor antagonist (propranolol), and β1- and β2-antagonist (betaxolol and ICI-118,551 HCl). Both the blockade of postsynaptic β1-adrenergic receptors and the activation of presynaptic inhibitory adrenergic autoreceptors selectively potentiated the magnitude of KOR-induced reinstatement of cocaine CPP but not cocaine-primed CPP reinstatement. Finally, viral restoration of KORs in the LC together with β-adrenergic receptor blockade did not potentiate KOR-induced reinstatement to cocaine CPP, suggesting that adrenergic receptor interactions occur at KOR-expressing regions external to the LC. These results identify a previously unknown interaction between KORs and NA systems and suggest a NA regulation of KOR-dependent reinstatement of cocaine CPP.


Nature Communications | 2015

Optodynamic simulation of β-adrenergic receptor signalling

Edward R. Siuda; Jordan G. McCall; Ream Al-Hasani; Gunchul Shin; Sung Il Park; Martin J. Schmidt; Sonya L. Anderson; William Planer; John A. Rogers; Michael R. Bruchas

Optogenetics has provided a revolutionary approach to dissecting biological phenomena. However, the generation and use of optically active GPCRs in these contexts is limited and it is unclear how well an opsin-chimera GPCR might mimic endogenous receptor activity. Here we show that a chimeric rhodopsin/β2 adrenergic receptor (opto-β2AR) is similar in dynamics to endogenous β2AR in terms of: cAMP generation, MAP kinase activation and receptor internalization. In addition, we develop and characterize a novel toolset of optically active, functionally selective GPCRs that can bias intracellular signalling cascades towards either G-protein or arrestin-mediated cAMP and MAP kinase pathways. Finally, we show how photoactivation of opto-β2AR in vivo modulates neuronal activity and induces anxiety-like behavioural states in both fiber-tethered and wireless, freely moving animals when expressed in brain regions known to contain β2ARs. These new GPCR approaches enhance the utility of optogenetics and allow for discrete spatiotemporal control of GPCR signalling in vitro and in vivo.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2013

Exposure to chronic mild stress prevents kappa opioid-mediated reinstatement of cocaine and nicotine place preference.

Ream Al-Hasani; Jordan G. McCall; Michael R. Bruchas

Stress increases the risk of drug abuse, causes relapse to drug seeking, and potentiates the rewarding properties of both nicotine and cocaine. Understanding the mechanisms by which stress regulates the rewarding properties of drugs of abuse provides valuable insight into potential treatments for drug abuse. Prior reports have demonstrated that stress causes dynorphin release, activating kappa opioid receptors (KOR) in monoamine circuits resulting in both potentiation and reinstatement of cocaine and nicotine conditioned place preference. Here we report that kappa opioid-dependent reinstatement of cocaine and nicotine place preference is reduced when the mice are exposed to a randomized chronic mild stress (CMS) regime prior to training in a conditioned place preference-reinstatement paradigm. The CMS schedule involves seven different stressors (removal of nesting for 24 h, 5 min forced swim stress at 15°C, 8 h food and water deprivation, damp bedding overnight, white noise, cage tilt, and disrupted home cage lighting) rotated over a 3-week period. This response is KOR-selective, as CMS does not protect against cocaine or nicotine drug-primed reinstatement. This protection from reinstatement is also observed following sub-chronic social defeat stress, where each mouse is placed in an aggressor mouse home cage for a period of 20 min over 5 days. In contrast, a single acute stressor resulted in a potentiation of KOR-induced reinstatement, as previously reported. Prior studies have shown that stress alters sensitivity to opioids and prior stress can influence the pharmacodynamics of the opioid receptor system. Together, these findings suggest that exposure to different forms of stress may cause a dysregulation of kappa opioid circuitry and that changes resulting from mild stress can have protective and adaptive effects against drug relapse.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Photo-activatable Cre recombinase regulates gene expression in vivo

Suzanne E. Schindler; Jordan G. McCall; Ping Yan; Krzysztof L. Hyrc; Mingjie Li; Chandra L. Tucker; Jin-Moo Lee; Michael R. Bruchas; Marc I. Diamond

Techniques allowing precise spatial and temporal control of gene expression in the brain are needed. Herein we describe optogenetic approaches using a photo-activatable Cre recombinase (PA-Cre) to stably modify gene expression in the mouse brain. Blue light illumination for 12 hours via optical fibers activated PA-Cre in the hippocampus, a deep brain structure. Two-photon illumination through a thinned skull window for 100 minutes activated PA-Cre within a sub-millimeter region of cortex. Light activation of PA-Cre may allow permanent gene modification with improved spatiotemporal precision compared to standard methods.


Cell Reports | 2016

Dynorphin Controls the Gain of an Amygdalar Anxiety Circuit

Nicole A. Crowley; Daniel W. Bloodgood; J. Andrew Hardaway; Alexis M. Kendra; Jordan G. McCall; Ream Al-Hasani; Nora M. McCall; Waylin Yu; Zachary L. Schools; Michael J. Krashes; Bradford B. Lowell; Jennifer L. Whistler; Michael R. Bruchas; Thomas L. Kash

Kappa opioid receptors (KORs) are involved in a variety of aversive behavioral states, including anxiety. To date, a circuit-based mechanism for KOR-driven anxiety has not been described. Here, we show that activation of KORs inhibits glutamate release from basolateral amygdala (BLA) inputs to the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) and occludes the anxiolytic phenotype seen with optogenetic activation of BLA-BNST projections. In addition, deletion of KORs from amygdala neurons results in an anxiolytic phenotype. Furthermore, we identify a frequency-dependent, optically evoked local dynorphin-induced heterosynaptic plasticity of glutamate inputs in the BNST. We also find that there is cell type specificity to the KOR modulation of the BLA-BNST input with greater KOR-mediated inhibition of BLA dynorphin-expressing neurons. Collectively, these results provide support for a model in which local dynorphin release can inhibit an anxiolytic pathway, providing a discrete therapeutic target for the treatment of anxiety disorders.

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Michael R. Bruchas

Washington University in St. Louis

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Edward R. Siuda

Washington University in St. Louis

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Robert W. Gereau

Washington University in St. Louis

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Jae Woong Jeong

University of Colorado Boulder

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Dionnet L. Bhatti

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gavin P. Schmitz

Washington University in St. Louis

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Tae-Il Kim

Seoul National University

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