| Literature DB >> 25092982 |
Ross A McDevitt1, Sean J Reed2, Jonathan P Britt3.
Abstract
There have been significant advances in the treatment of psychiatric disease in the last half century, but it is still unclear which neural circuits are ultimately responsible for specific disease states. Fortunately, technical limitations that have constrained this research have recently been mitigated by advances in research tools that facilitate circuit-based analyses. The most prominent of these tools is optogenetics, which refers to the use of genetically encoded, light-sensitive proteins that can be used to manipulate discrete neural circuits with temporal precision. Optogenetics has recently been used to examine the neural underpinnings of both psychiatric disease and symptom relief, and this research has rapidly identified novel therapeutic targets for what could be a new generation of rational drug development. As these and related methodologies for controlling neurons ultimately make their way into the clinic, circuit-based strategies for alleviating psychiatric symptoms could become a remarkably refined approach to disease treatment.Entities:
Keywords: addiction; anxiety; depression; obsessive-compulsive disorder; optogenetics
Year: 2014 PMID: 25092982 PMCID: PMC4114904 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S45896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Summary of noteworthy opsin proteins commonly used in optogenetic research
| Role | Opsin | Wavelength (nm) | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Excitatory | ChR1 | 500 | Original opsin. Not conventionally used. | |
| ChR2 | 473 | Suitable for stimulation paradigms <40 Hz. | ||
| ChETA | 500 | ChR2 variant. Spike fidelity up to 200 Hz. Red-shifted variant exists. | ||
| CatCh | 474 | Ca2+-permeable ChR2 variant. 2.5× more photocurrent, 70× more light-sensitive, and higher frequency fidelity than ChR2. | ||
| C1V1 | 560 | Red-shifted chimeric opsin with full spectrum separation from ChR2. | ||
| SFO | 470/561 | Prolonged depolarizing effect with single light-pulse activation (470 nm) and termination (561 nm). | ||
| Inhibitory | iC1C2/ChloC | 475/465 | Chloride-conducting ion channel. | |
| eNpHR3.0 | 590 | Chloride pump. Can potentially disrupt chloride gradient and cause post-inhibitory excitatory states. | ||
| eArch3.0 | 560 | Proton pump. | ||
| Cell signaling | OptoXR | 500 | Chimeric proteins in which G-protein coupled receptors are sensitive to light. Currently available with adrenergic (Gq, Gs) and serotonergic (Gi/o) receptors. |
Note:
Variants of these opsins have different spectral absorption peaks.
Abbreviations: ChR, channelrhodopsin; eNpHR3.0, halorhodopsin; eArch3.0, archaerhodopsin; SFO, step function opsin.
Contribution of various brain regions and circuits to the expression of depression-like symptoms
| Neuronal population | Contribution | Behavioral model | Species | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PFC | Antidepressant | Forced swim test | Mouse | |
| PFC | Antidepressant | Social defeat | Mouse | |
| PFC | None | Forced swim test | Rat | |
| PFC-DRN | Antidepressant | Forced swim test | Rat | |
| PFC-DRN | Prodepressant | Social defeat | Mouse | |
| DRN (GABA) | Prodepressant | Social defeat | Mouse | |
| VTA (dopamine) | Antidepressant | Forced swim | Rat | |
| VTA (dopamine) | Antidepressant | Chronic stress | Mouse | |
| VTA (dopamine) | Prodepressant | Social defeat | Mouse | |
| VTA-NAcc | Antidepressant | Social defeat | Mouse | |
| VTA-mPFC | None | Social defeat | Mouse |
Notes: This table is a summary of studies that used optogenetic methodology to test depression circuitry. “Antidepressant” cell populations are those in which stimulation produces antidepressant-like behavioral effects and/or inhibition of which reduces these measures; “prodepressant” populations produce the opposite pattern of responses. Because of the equivocal findings of these studies, details are presented on behavioral model and species tested.
Abbreviations: PFC, prefrontal cortex; DRN, dorsal raphe nucleus; GABA, gamma-aminobutyric acid; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; NAcc, nucleus accumbens; VTA, ventral tegmental area.
Figure 1Schematic depiction of brain circuits controlling anxiety.
Notes: Recent studies utilizing optogenetic approaches have implicated discrete populations of neurons and neural projections in anxiety disorders. Circles represent populations of neurons that have been targeted with optogenetic manipulations. Anxiogenic populations are represented in red, anxiolytic in blue, and populations producing no effect in white. Experiments in which opsins were targeted to genetically-defined cell populations are indicated by the relevant cell type listed within the circle. The presence or absence of projections from these neurons (circles) in the figure indicates whether the represented experiment targeted optical manipulations at terminals or cell bodies, respectively.
Abbreviations: BLA, basolateral amygdala; BNST, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; CEA, central nucleus of the amygdala; CRF R2, corticotropin-releasing factor receptor 2; D1R, dopamine receptor D1; GABA, gamma-aminobutyric acid; Glu, glutamate; HIPP, hippocampus; hypothal, hypothalamus; LS, lateral septum; mPFC, medial prefrontal cortex; oxy, oxytocin; VTA, ventral tegmental area.