| Literature DB >> 26857748 |
Flavie Lavoie-Cardinal1, Charleen Salesse1, Éric Bergeron2, Michel Meunier2, Paul De Koninck1,3.
Abstract
Light-assisted manipulation of cells to control membrane activity or intracellular signaling has become a major avenue in life sciences. However, the ability to perform subcellular light stimulation to investigate localized signaling has been limited. Here, we introduce an all optical method for the stimulation and the monitoring of localized Ca(2+) signaling in neurons that takes advantage of plasmonic excitation of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). We show with confocal microscopy that 800 nm laser pulse application onto a neuron decorated with a few AuNPs triggers a transient increase in free Ca(2+), measured optically with GCaMP6s. We show that action potentials, measured electrophysiologically, can be induced with this approach. We demonstrate activation of local Ca(2+) transients and Ca(2+) signaling via CaMKII in dendritic domains, by illuminating a single or few functionalized AuNPs specifically targeting genetically-modified neurons. This NP-Assisted Localized Optical Stimulation (NALOS) provides a new complement to light-dependent methods for controlling neuronal activity and cell signaling.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26857748 PMCID: PMC4746645 DOI: 10.1038/srep20619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Neuronal stimulation with illumination of bare AuNPs.
(a) Fluorescence of GCaMP6s (green) and reflectance at 800 nm of the AuNPs (red). The measured full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the reflection PSF of a single AuNP is shown in the upper left corner. (b) Representative example from 21 neurons of the change in GCaMP6s fluorescence following a single scan of the whole imaging field with the NIR fs laser, at the time points indicated by the dotted lines in (c). The labels “1, 2, 3” indicate the timing of the images corresponding to those in (c). (c) Ca2+ signal (ΔF/F) over time in the respective colored regions marked in (b); red dotted lines indicate time of laser stimulation. (d,e) NALOS in a dendrite can trigger a cell-wide Ca2+ transient. (d) Fluorescence of GCaMP6s and reflectance of the AuNPs (red) prior to (1) and after (2) NALOS in the white circle. (e) Ca2+ signal (ΔF/F) over time in the respective colored regions marked in (d); red dotted lines indicate timing of laser stimulation. (f,g) NALOS with lower intensity in a dendrite can trigger highly localized Ca2+ transient. Same approach as in (d,e). Scale bars 10 μm. More detailed quantification of the observed Ca2+ after NALOS is shown in Suppl. Fig. 1.
Figure 2NALOS with functionalized AuNPs.
(a,b) Representative neurons expressing (a) HA-GluA1 and GCaMP6s (n = 5) or (b) only GCaMP6s (n = 5) and incubated 90 min with fAuNPs, imaged as in Fig. 1. The right panels in (a) and (b) show the same neuron as on their left, following fixation and immunostaining for the Ha-tag (revealed with Alexa 546). Without the presence of the HA-GluA1, the fAuNPs (functionalized with monoclonal anti-HA antibodies) did not bind on the neurons. (c-e) NALOS with fAuNPs triggered localized and repeatable Ca2+ transients (n = 10). (c) Other representative neuron transfected and imaged as in (a). (d) Magnification of the region marked in (c) for three consecutive time points (marked with 1, 2 and 3 on the graph in (e)); NALOS was applied on the region marked with a white circle. (e) Ca2+ signal (ΔF/F) of the corresponding colored oval regions marked in (c), before and after NALOS at the time points marked by dotted lines. Scale bars (a,b) 10 μm and (c,d) 5 μm.
Figure 3Optical and electrophysiological recording during NALOS.
(a,c,e,g) Representative neurons transfected as in Fig. 2, and imaged after pre-incubation with AuNPs (e, or not: g) or fAuNPs (a,c), and simultaneously patch-clamped under whole-cell current clamp (8 neurons, 2 independent cultures) (b,d) or voltage clamp configurations (f: 24 ROIs, 11 neurons, 5 independent cultures; h: 32 ROIs, 6 neurons, 2 cultures). (b,d) Ca2+ signal (ΔF/F) of the blue and red regions marked in (a,c) and voltage fluctuations over the same time (black trace). At lower stimulation intensity (0.7 MW/cm2) (a,b), NALOS induced a single AP (distinct from spontaneous synaptic events in that neuron) while higher stimulation intensity (1.0 MW/cm2) induced a burst of APs (c,d). (f) Top trace: Ca2+ transient evoked by NALOS and measured in the dendritic region marked in red in (e); bottom trace: spontaneous miniature synaptic currents (in TTX). Note the larger current evoked by the NIR fs laser stimulus. (h) Top trace: in absence of AuNP, no Ca2+ transient (measured in the stimulation ROI [white circles in g]) was evoked by the NIR fs laser, bottom trace: no current was evoked by NALOS in absence of AuNP (in all 32 ROIs from 6 neurons tested). (i) Correlation between the measured Ca2+ and electrophysiological response. The measured ΔF/F was multiplied by the dendritic area for which a fluorescence increase above noise threshold (twice the standard deviation of the baseline) was observed. The observed Ca2+ response was generally higher for stronger evoked depolarization. Black squares represent the averaged (±SEM) responses for 3 grouped electrophysiological responses (25-50 pA, 50–110 pA, 110–320 pA). A linear fit of the data is shown in grey (slope 0.15 ± 0.05, Pearson’s R = 0.51) (24 ROIs, 11 neurons, 5 independent cultures). The red dashed lines shown in (b,d,f,h) indicate the time point of laser stimulation. Stimulated area is indicated with a white circle in (a,c,e,g). Scale bars (a) 10 μm (c,e,g) 5 μm. Power range for e-i: 0.16–0.57 MW/cm2.
Figure 4CaMKII translocation to local dendritic domains stimulated by NALOS.
(a) Fluorescence of GFP-CaMKII (green) and reflectance of the AuNPs (red) before stimulation. (b) Magnification of the region marked in (a) for 8 different time points. The white circle shows the region of NALOS and the white arrows mark the region where GFP-CaMKII translocation was observed. Representative example of 18 neurons. (c,d) Neuron co-transfected with GFP-CaMKII and RCaMP1.07. (c) Fluorescence of GFP-CaMKII and reflectance of the fAuNPs before stimulation. (d) Fluorescence of RCaMP1.07 (top) and GFP-CaMKII (bottom) 1.5 s after the first stimulation. (e) Top trace: Ca2+ levels measured in the yellow region marked in (d); bottom trace: Intensity of GFP-CaMKII in the same region. Representative example of 6 neurons. Note the spontaneous Ca2+ transient that precedes the 2nd stimulus, triggering a longer lasting Ca2+ event and CaMKII response. White circle in (c) shows the region of photo-stimulation at the time points marked with dotted lines in (e). Scale bars 5 μm.