Synthetic retinal analogues modify the spectral and kinetic characteristics of microbial rhodopsin optogenetic tools
Optogenetic tools have become indispensable in neuroscience to stimulate or inhibit excitable cells by light. Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) variants have been established by mutating the opsin backbone or by mining related algal genomes. As an alternative strategy, we surveyed synthetic retinal analogue...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2014-12, Vol.5 (1), p.5810-5810, Article 5810 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Optogenetic tools have become indispensable in neuroscience to stimulate or inhibit excitable cells by light. Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) variants have been established by mutating the opsin backbone or by mining related algal genomes. As an alternative strategy, we surveyed synthetic retinal analogues combined with microbial rhodopsins for functional and spectral properties, capitalizing on assays in
C. elegans
, HEK cells and larval
Drosophila
. Compared with all-
trans
retinal (ATR), Dimethylamino-retinal (DMAR) shifts the action spectra maxima of ChR2 variants H134R and H134R/T159C from 480 to 520 nm. Moreover, DMAR decelerates the photocycle of ChR2(H134R) and (H134R/T159C), thereby reducing the light intensity required for persistent channel activation. In hyperpolarizing archaerhodopsin-3 and Mac, naphthyl-retinal and thiophene-retinal support activity alike ATR, yet at altered peak wavelengths. Our experiments enable applications of retinal analogues in colour tuning and altering photocycle characteristics of optogenetic tools, thereby increasing the operational light sensitivity of existing cell lines or transgenic animals.
Efforts to improve the performance of optogenetic tools for neuroscience research have mostly been focused on mutating the opsin backbones or mining-related algal genomes. Here the authors show that analogues of the chromophore, retinal, can be used for colour tuning of rhodopsins and altering their photocycle kinetics in several model organisms. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ncomms6810 |