Optogenetic Control by Pulsed Illumination

Sensory photoreceptors evoke numerous adaptive responses in nature and serve as light‐gated actuators in optogenetics to enable the spatiotemporally precise, reversible, and noninvasive control of cellular events. The output of optogenetic circuits can often be dialed in by varying illumination qual...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology 2018-06, Vol.19 (12), p.1296-1304
Hauptverfasser: Hennemann, Julia, Iwasaki, Roman S., Grund, Tamara N., Diensthuber, Ralph P., Richter, Florian, Möglich, Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Sensory photoreceptors evoke numerous adaptive responses in nature and serve as light‐gated actuators in optogenetics to enable the spatiotemporally precise, reversible, and noninvasive control of cellular events. The output of optogenetic circuits can often be dialed in by varying illumination quality, quantity, and duration. A programmable matrix of light‐emitting diodes has been devised to efficiently probe the response of optogenetic systems to intermittently applied light of varying intensity and pulse frequency. Circuits for light‐regulated gene expression markedly differed in their responses to pulsed illumination of a single color which sufficed for their sequential triggering. In addition to quantity and quality, the pulse frequency of intermittent light hence provides a further input variable for output control in optogenetics and photobiology. Pulsed illumination schemes allow the reduction of overall light dose and facilitate the multiplexing of several lightdependent actuators and reporters. Light control: The pulse frequency of intermittent light complements light quantity and quality as an additional input variable for controlling system output in optogenetics and photobiology. Pulsed illumination of a single color suffices for sequentially triggering expression of several genes.
ISSN:1439-4227
1439-7633
DOI:10.1002/cbic.201800030