The Brains Secrets (Karl Deisseroth, M.D., PhD)

Published: June 20, 2024, 7:01 a.m.

\u201cWhat optogenetics does is it's an engine of discovery. It helps us identify what matters, what's causing things to happen in the brain. And we know now the cells and the connections make these powerful motivations and drives manifest. That opens the door to any kind of new treatment, right? If you know the cells, then you can look at the DNA and the RNA in those cells. You can see what proteins those cells are making, and that gives you clues for medication targets. You can say, okay, this cell has these proteins on its surface, that would give us an idea for a pill, for a medication that might act specifically on that cell that now we know for the first time is causal. It's not just correlated with, it's actually causing these symptoms or the resolution of these symptoms. And if we can now design a medication that targets that cell, we might have a treatment.\u201d\nSo says Karl Deisseroth, a psychiatrist, neuroscientist and bioengineering professor at Stanford. Karl is also the author of Projections: The New Science of Human Emotion, which is a beautiful revisitation and exploration of his time as a psychiatry resident, where he encountered all sorts of people who didn\u2019t quite understand what was happening to their brains\u2014and by extension their minds.\nIn the book\u2014and in our conversation today\u2014Karl explores mania, autism spectrum disorder, eating disorders, borderline personality disorder, psychopathy, and dementia, all in gorgeous prose. Karl runs a lab at Stanford that focuses on optogenetics, mind-blowing science that can pinpoint where adaptive and maladaptive behaviors begin in the brain. He\u2019s won the Kyoto Prize and Heineken Prize for his research, which is not surprising\u2014it just might change the entire world of psychiatry.\nToday\u2019s conversation is far-ranging and it\u2019s also surprising, including a conversation about how some of these disorders\u2014like eating disorders, which can be deadly, can also be strangely adaptive. Please stick with us.\xa0\n\nMORE FROM KARL DEISSEROTH, M.D., PhD:\nProjections: The New Science of Human Emotion\nFollow Karl Deisseroth on Twitter\n \nTo learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy\n \n Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices