Literature DB >> 27786461

Painting with Rainbows: Patterning Light in Space, Time, and Wavelength for Multiphoton Optogenetic Sensing and Control.

Daan Brinks1, Yoav Adam1, Simon Kheifets1, Adam E Cohen1,2,3.   

Abstract

Photons are a fascinating reagent, flowing and reacting quite differently compared to more massive and less ephemeral particles of matter. The optogenetic palette comprises an ever growing set of light-responsive proteins, which open the possibility of using light to perturb and to measure biological processes with great precision in space and time. Yet there are limits on what light can achieve. Diffraction limits the smallest features, and scattering in tissue limits the largest. Photobleaching, diffusion of photogenerated products, and optical crosstalk between overlapping absorption spectra further muddy the optogenetic picture, particularly when one wants to use multiple optogenetic tools simultaneously. But these obstacles are surmountable. Most light-responsive proteins and small molecules undergo more than one light-driven transition, often with different action spectra and kinetics. By overlapping multiple laser beams, carefully patterned in space, time, and wavelength, one can steer molecules into fluorescent or nonfluorescent, active or inactive conformations. By doing so, one can often circumvent the limitations of simple one-photon excitation and achieve new imaging and stimulation capabilities. These include subdiffraction spatial resolution, optical sectioning, robustness to light scattering, and multiplexing of more channels than can be achieved with simple one-photon excitation. The microbial rhodopsins are a particularly rich substrate for this type of multiphoton optical control. The natural diversity of these proteins presents a huge range of starting materials. The spectroscopy and photocycles of microbial rhodopsins are relatively well understood, providing states with absorption maxima across the visible spectrum, which can be accessed on experimentally convenient time scales. A long history of mutational studies in microbial rhodopsins allows semirational protein engineering. Mutants of Archaerhodopsin 3 (Arch) come in all the colors of the rainbow. In a solution of purified Arch-eGFP, a focused green laser excites eGFP fluorescence throughout the laser path, while a focused red laser excites fluorescence of Arch only near the focus, indicative of multiphoton fluorescence. This nonlinearity occurs at a laser intensity ∼1010-fold lower than in conventional two-photon microscopy! The mutant Arch(D95H) shows photoswitchable optical bistability. In a lawn of E. coli expressing this mutant, illumination with patterned blue light converts the molecule into a state that is fluorescent. Illumination with red light excites this fluorescence, and gradually resets the molecules back to the non-fluorescent state. This review describes the new types of molecular logic that can be implemented with multi-photon control of microbial rhodopsins, from whole-brain activity mapping to measurements of absolute membrane voltage. Part of our goal in this Account is to describe recent work in nonlinear optogenetics, but we also present a variety of interesting things one could do if only the right optogenetic molecules were available. This latter component is intended to inspire future spectroscopic, protein discovery, and protein engineering work.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27786461     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00415

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  8 in total

1.  Investigating the feasibility of channelrhodopsin variants for nanoscale optogenetics.

Authors:  Markus A Stahlberg; Charu Ramakrishnan; Katrin I Willig; Edward S Boyden; Karl Deisseroth; Camin Dean
Journal:  Neurophotonics       Date:  2019-02-28       Impact factor: 3.593

2.  Automatic Multi-functional Integration Program (AMFIP) towards all-optical mechano-electrophysiology interrogation.

Authors:  Qin Luo; Justin Zhang; Miao Huang; Gaoming Lin; Mai Tanaka; Sharon Lepler; Juan Guan; Dietmar Siemann; Xin Tang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-07-28       Impact factor: 3.752

Review 3.  Rhodopsins: An Excitingly Versatile Protein Species for Research, Development and Creative Engineering.

Authors:  Willem J de Grip; Srividya Ganapathy
Journal:  Front Chem       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 5.545

4.  Long-Range Optogenetic Control of Axon Guidance Overcomes Developmental Boundaries and Defects.

Authors:  James M Harris; Andy Yu-Der Wang; Jonathan Boulanger-Weill; Cristina Santoriello; Stephan Foianini; Jeff W Lichtman; Leonard I Zon; Paola Arlotta
Journal:  Dev Cell       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 12.270

5.  Toward Decoding Bioelectric Events in Xenopus Embryogenesis: New Methodology for Tracking Interplay Between Calcium and Resting Potentials In Vivo.

Authors:  Patrick McMillen; Richard Novak; Michael Levin
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2019-11-09       Impact factor: 5.469

Review 6.  Voltage imaging with genetically encoded indicators.

Authors:  Yongxian Xu; Peng Zou; Adam E Cohen
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2017-04-28       Impact factor: 8.822

7.  Quinoline-Derived Two-Photon-Sensitive Octupolar Probes.

Authors:  Petra Dunkel; Morgane Petit; Hamid Dhimane; Mireille Blanchard-Desce; David Ogden; Peter I Dalko
Journal:  ChemistryOpen       Date:  2017-07-20       Impact factor: 2.911

8.  CerebraLux: a low-cost, open-source, wireless probe for optogenetic stimulation.

Authors:  Robel Dagnew; Yin-Ying Lin; Jerikko Agatep; Michael Cheng; Andrew Jann; Viola Quach; Michelle Monroe; Ganeev Singh; Ani Minasyan; Joshua Hakimian; Theodore Kee; Jesse Cushman; Wendy Walwyn
Journal:  Neurophotonics       Date:  2017-10-11       Impact factor: 3.593

  8 in total

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