Publication: Imaging GFP-Based Reporters in Neurons with Multiwavelength Optogenetic Control
Date
2014
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Elsevier BV
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Venkatachalam, Veena, and Adam E. Cohen. 2014. “Imaging GFP-Based Reporters in Neurons with Multiwavelength Optogenetic Control.” Biophysical Journal 107 (7) (October): 1554–1563. doi:10.1016/j.bpj.2014.08.020.
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Abstract
To study the impact of neural activity on cellular physiology, one would like to combine precise control of firing patterns with highly sensitive probes of cellular physiology. Light-gated ion channels, e.g., Channelrhodopsin-2, enable precise control of firing patterns; green fluorescent protein-based reporters, e.g., the GCaMP6f Ca2þ reporter, enable highly sensitive probing of cellular physiology. However, for most actuator-reporter combinations, spectral overlap prevents straightforward combination within a single cell. Here we explore multiwavelength control of channelrhodopsins to circumvent this limitation. The ‘‘stoplight’’ technique described in this article uses channelrhodopsin variants that are opened by blue light and closed by orange light. Cells are illuminated with constant blue light to excite fluorescence of a green fluorescent protein-based reporter. Modulated illumination with orange light negatively regulates activation of the channelrhodopsin. We performed detailed photophysical characterization and kinetic modeling of four candidate stoplight channelrhodopsins. The variant with the highest contrast, sdChR(C138S,E154A), enabled all-optical measurements of activity-induced calcium transients in cultured rat hippocampal neurons, although cell-to-cell variation in expression levels presents a challenge for quantification.
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