Photochemical control of endogenous ion channels and cellular excitability

Light-activated ion channels provide a precise and noninvasive optical means for controlling action potential firing, but the genes encoding these channels must first be delivered and expressed in target cells. Here we describe a method for bestowing light sensitivity onto endogenous ion channels th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature methods 2008-04, Vol.5 (4), p.331-338
Hauptverfasser: Fortin, Doris L, Banghart, Matthew R, Dunn, Timothy W, Borges, Katharine, Wagenaar, Daniel A, Gaudry, Quentin, Karakossian, Movses H, Otis, Thomas S, Kristan, William B, Trauner, Dirk, Kramer, Richard H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Light-activated ion channels provide a precise and noninvasive optical means for controlling action potential firing, but the genes encoding these channels must first be delivered and expressed in target cells. Here we describe a method for bestowing light sensitivity onto endogenous ion channels that does not rely on exogenous gene expression. The method uses a synthetic photoisomerizable small molecule, or photoswitchable affinity label (PAL), that specifically targets K + channels. PALs contain a reactive electrophile, enabling covalent attachment of the photoswitch to naturally occurring nucleophiles in K + channels. Ion flow through PAL-modified channels is turned on or off by photoisomerizing PAL with different wavelengths of light. We showed that PAL treatment confers light sensitivity onto endogenous K + channels in isolated rat neurons and in intact neural structures from rat and leech, allowing rapid optical regulation of excitability without genetic modification.
ISSN:1548-7091
1548-7105
DOI:10.1038/nmeth.1187