Neural circuit repair by low-intensity magnetic stimulation requires cryptochrome

2018 
Magnetic brain stimulation is a promising treatment in neurology and psychiatry, but clinical outcomes are variable. Unfortunately, mechanisms underlying magnetic stimulation effects are ill-defined, which impedes the development of stimulation protocols appropriate for different neurological conditions. Here we show, in vivo and ex vivo, that repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation at low-intensity (LI-rTMS) induces axon outgrowth and synaptogenesis to repair a neural circuit. This repair depends on stimulation pattern, with complex patterns being particularly effective, and its mechanism requires the presence of cryptochrome (Cry), a putative magneto-receptor. Effective LI-rTMS patterns altered expression of Cry target genes known to promote neuronal repair. Because LI-rTMS generates electric fields too weak to depolarise neurons, these findings indicate that the magnetic field itself induces the repair. Our data open a new framework for magnetic stimulation - cryptochrome-mediated molecular and structural neuroplasticity. This information suggests new routes to treatments specific for each neurological disease.
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