| Literature DB >> 23399979 |
Abstract
Caged compounds are small organic molecules that can be photoactivated with brief pulses of light. They are widely used to study a great variety of biological processes by physiologists, cell biologists and neuroscientists. Initially made and invented by biologists in the late 1970s, they are now made mostly by chemists, often without any dialogue with the end users, the biologists. The idea for this review is to stimulate interaction between the two communities to further the creative development and application of these powerful optical probes.Entities:
Keywords: caged compounds; cell signaling; electrophysiology; neuronal currents; photolabile neurotransmitters; rates of reaction; receptor antagonism
Year: 2013 PMID: 23399979 PMCID: PMC3566830 DOI: 10.3762/bjoc.9.8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Org Chem ISSN: 1860-5397 Impact factor: 2.883
Figure 1Structures of various caging chromophores. Abbreviations: Noc, N-nitrophenethyloxycarbonyl; CNB, carboxynitrobenzyl; DMCNB, dimethoxycarboxynitrobenzyl; Bhc, bromohydroxycoumarin; MANI, methylacetoxynitroindolinyl; MNI, methoxynitroindolinyl; antMNI, antennea-methoxynitroindolinyl; DEAC, diethylaminocoumarin; CDNI, carboxymethylnitroindolinyl; PMNB, propylmethoxynitrobiphenyl; BNSF, bisnitropropylstyrylfluorene; RuBi, ruthenium-bipyridine.
Properties of various caged glutamate probesa.
| Caged Glu | ε (λmax) | Φ (% Glu yield) | ε·Φ | 2PuCS (GM/nm) | Commercial | Pharmacology towards GABA-A | Stability in aqueous buffer | Solubility (mM) at pH 7.4 in aqueous buffer |
| Noc | 500 (350) | 0.65 (100) | 325 | NR | none | NR | Stable | >50 |
| CNB | 500 (350) | 0.14 (100) | 60 | NR | Invitrogen | Partial agonist | Half-life 17 h rt | >50 |
| MNI | 4,300 (330) | 0.085 (>95) | 357 | 0.06 (740) | Tocris | SA 10 mM | Stable | 400 |
| RuBi | 5,600 (450) | 0.13 (NQ) | 728 | 0.14 (800) | Tocris | 50% inhibition at 0.3 mM | Stable | NR |
| PMNB | 9,900 (317) | 0.1 (100) | 990 | 0.45 (800) | none | NR | Stable | Requires 1% DMSO |
| antMNI | 27,000 (300) | 0.085 (94) | 2295 | NR | none | NR | Stable | 33 |
| BNSF | 64,000 (415) | 0.25 (65) | 16,000 | 5 (800) | none | NR | ND | 0.1 |
| CDNI | 6,400 (330) | 0.6 (100) | 3,840 | 0.06 (720) | none | MA 0.4 mM | Stable pH 2 | 100 |
| DEAC | 13,700 (390) | 0.11 (NQ) | 1507 | NR | none | NR | stable | NR |
| MANI | 4,300 (330) | 0.1 (100) | 430 | NR | Sigma | NR | Like MNI | >100 |
| Bhc | 43,000 (458) | 0.3 (100) | 12,900 | 1 (740) | none | NR | Stable frozen pH 7.4 | 7.5 |
aAbbreviations and symbols: ε, extinction coefficient; Φ, quantum yield; 2PuCS, 2-photon uncaging cross section; NR, not reported; MA, mild agonist; Noc, N-nitrophenethyloxycarbonyl; CNB, carboxynitrobenzyl; MNI, methoxynitroindolinyl; RuBi, ruthenium-bipyridine; PMNB, propylmethoxynitrobiphenyl; antMNI, antennea-methoxynitroindolinyl; BNSF, bisnitropropylstyrylfluorene; CDNI, carboxymethylnitroindolinyl; DEAC, diethylaminocoumarin; MANI, methylacetoxynitroindolinyl; Bhc, bromohydroxycoumarin.
Figure 2Comparative two-photon uncaging of MNI-Glu and CDNI-Glu on pyramidal neurons in an acutely isolated brain slice. (A) Fluorescent image of a pyramidal neuron filled with red dye. Numbered crosses correspond to the positions of the points of uncaging in B. (B) Currents evoked by two-photon irradiation at points marked in A. (C) Comparative photolysis of MNI-Glu and CDNI-Glu on the same neuron. The caged compound was topically applied from a puffer pipette at a concentration of 10 mM above the brain slice. Current traces are an average of several trials. (D, E) Relative peak currents and charges evoked by CDNI/MNI. Note some receptor saturation from uncaging the more photoactive CDNI decreases the ratio at higher powers. Data courtesy of Martin Paukert and Dwight Bergles (Johns Hopkins School of Medicine). The two caged compounds were applied "blind" during these experiments.