Noninvasive optical activation of Flp recombinase for genetic manipulation in deep mouse brain regions

Spatiotemporal control of gene expression or labeling is a valuable strategy for identifying functions of genes within complex neural circuits. Here, we develop a highly light-sensitive and efficient photoactivatable Flp recombinase (PA-Flp) that is suitable for genetic manipulation in vivo. The hig...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-01, Vol.10 (1), p.314-314, Article 314
Hauptverfasser: Jung, Hyunjin, Kim, Seong-Wook, Kim, Minsoo, Hong, Jongryul, Yu, Daseuli, Kim, Ji Hye, Lee, Yunju, Kim, Sungsoo, Woo, Doyeon, Shin, Hee-Sup, Park, Byung Ouk, Heo, Won Do
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Spatiotemporal control of gene expression or labeling is a valuable strategy for identifying functions of genes within complex neural circuits. Here, we develop a highly light-sensitive and efficient photoactivatable Flp recombinase (PA-Flp) that is suitable for genetic manipulation in vivo. The highly light-sensitive property of PA-Flp is ideal for activation in deep mouse brain regions by illumination with a noninvasive light-emitting diode. In addition, PA-Flp can be extended to the Cre-lox system through a viral vector as Flp-dependent Cre expression platform, thereby activating both Flp and Cre. Finally, we demonstrate that PA-Flp–dependent, Cre-mediated Ca v 3.1 silencing in the medial septum increases object-exploration behavior in mice. Thus, PA-Flp is a noninvasive, highly efficient, and easy-to-use optogenetic module that offers a side-effect-free and expandable genetic manipulation tool for neuroscience research. Most approaches to control gene expression in vivo require generation of knock-in mouse lines and often lack spatiotemporal control. Here the authors develop a photo-activatable Flp recombinase system and demonstrate its use by controlling object-exploration behavior in mice through Cav3.1 silencing.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-08282-8