Literature DB >> 26699459

Structural foundations of optogenetics: Determinants of channelrhodopsin ion selectivity.

Andre Berndt1, Soo Yeun Lee1, Jonas Wietek2, Charu Ramakrishnan1, Elizabeth E Steinberg3, Asim J Rashid4, Hoseok Kim5, Sungmo Park4, Adam Santoro4, Paul W Frankland4, Shrivats M Iyer1, Sally Pak1, Sofie Ährlund-Richter5, Scott L Delp1, Robert C Malenka3, Sheena A Josselyn4, Marie Carlén5, Peter Hegemann2, Karl Deisseroth6.   

Abstract

The structure-guided design of chloride-conducting channelrhodopsins has illuminated mechanisms underlying ion selectivity of this remarkable family of light-activated ion channels. The first generation of chloride-conducting channelrhodopsins, guided in part by development of a structure-informed electrostatic model for pore selectivity, included both the introduction of amino acids with positively charged side chains into the ion conduction pathway and the removal of residues hypothesized to support negatively charged binding sites for cations. Engineered channels indeed became chloride selective, reversing near -65 mV and enabling a new kind of optogenetic inhibition; however, these first-generation chloride-conducting channels displayed small photocurrents and were not tested for optogenetic inhibition of behavior. Here we report the validation and further development of the channelrhodopsin pore model via crystal structure-guided engineering of next-generation light-activated chloride channels (iC++) and a bistable variant (SwiChR++) with net photocurrents increased more than 15-fold under physiological conditions, reversal potential further decreased by another ∼ 15 mV, inhibition of spiking faithfully tracking chloride gradients and intrinsic cell properties, strong expression in vivo, and the initial microbial opsin channel-inhibitor-based control of freely moving behavior. We further show that inhibition by light-gated chloride channels is mediated mainly by shunting effects, which exert optogenetic control much more efficiently than the hyperpolarization induced by light-activated chloride pumps. The design and functional features of these next-generation chloride-conducting channelrhodopsins provide both chronic and acute timescale tools for reversible optogenetic inhibition, confirm fundamental predictions of the ion selectivity model, and further elucidate electrostatic and steric structure-function relationships of the light-gated pore.

Entities:  

Keywords:  channelrhodopsin; chloride; neuronal inhibition; optogenetics; structure

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26699459      PMCID: PMC4743797          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1523341113

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  36 in total

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