| Literature DB >> 29250483 |
Zhijie Chen1, Tan M Truong2, Hui-Wang Ai2,3.
Abstract
Fluorescent protein-based biosensors are indispensable molecular tools for life science research. The invention and development of high-fidelity biosensors for a particular molecule or molecular event often catalyze important scientific breakthroughs. Understanding the structural and functional organization of brain activities remain a subject for which optical sensors are in desperate need and of growing interest. Here, we review genetically encoded fluorescent sensors for imaging neuronal activities with a focus on the design principles and optimizations of various sensors. New bioluminescent sensors useful for deep-tissue imaging are also discussed. By highlighting the protein engineering efforts and experimental applications of these sensors, we can consequently analyze factors influencing their performance. Finally, we remark on how future developments can fill technological gaps and lead to new discoveries.Entities:
Keywords: bioluminescent sensors; biosensors; brain imaging; fluorescent probes/indicators; fluorescent proteins; genetically encoded calcium indicators; genetically encoded glutamate sensors; genetically encoded voltage sensors; pH indicators; synaptic activity indicators
Year: 2017 PMID: 29250483 PMCID: PMC5729940 DOI: 10.3390/chemosensors5040032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9040
Figure 1Biochemical events associated with neuronal activity
The brain contains a large and complex neuronal network that consists of billions of neurons and astrocytes. Biochemical signals that have been successfully probed with genetically encoded fluorescent probes include membrane voltage (electric activity), intracellular Ca2+, synaptic vesicle recycling, and neurotransmitter release.
A list of genetically encoded Ca2+ indicators.
| GECIs | Type | Sensing Module | Reporting Module | Dynamic Range | Selected Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cameleon-1 | FRET | CaM-M13 | BFP-GFP | 70% | HeLa cells | [ |
| YC2.1 | FRET | CaM-M13 | ECFP-EYFP | 100% | HeLa cells; hippocampal neuron | [ |
| YC3.6 | FRET | CaM-M13 | ECFP-cp173Venus | 560% | HeLa cells; transgenic mice | [ |
| YC6.1 | FRET | CaM, CKKp | CFP-YFP | 200% | HeLa cells; hippocampal neuron | [ |
| D3cpV | FRET | CaM-M13 | ECFP-cpVenus | 510% | Hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| YC-Nano | FRET | CaM-M13 | ECFP-cp173Venus | 1450% | Layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons; zebrafish embryo | [ |
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| TN-L15 | FRET | csTnC | CFP-Citrine | 140% | HEK293 cells and primary hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| TN-XL | FRET | csTnC | ECFP-Citrine cp174 | 400% | Presynaptic motoneuron terminals of transgenic fruit flies | [ |
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| TN-XXL | FRET | csTnC | ECFP-Citrine Cp174 | 510% | Drosophila motor neuron boutons; mouse visual cortex | [ |
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| 3xCFP–TnC–cpVenus | FRET | csTnC | 3xCFP/cpVenus | 1165% | PC12 Cells | [ |
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| Twitch-2B | FRET | tsTnC | cpVenusCD and mCerulean3 | >1000% | Mouse brain and T lymph nodes | [ |
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| BRAC | BRET | CaM-M13 | Venus, RLuc8 | 60% | HeLa cells and plant leaves | [ |
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| Nano-lantern (Ca2+) | BRET | CaM-M13 | Venus, split RLuc8 | 300% | HeLa cells and hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| Camgaroo-1 | Single-FP | CaM | EYFP | 700% | HeLa cells | [ |
| Camgaroo-2 | Single-FP | CaM | Citrine | 700% | HeLa cells | [ |
| Pericam | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEYFP | 800% | HeLa cells | [ |
| GCaMP1.3 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 450% | HEK-293 cells and mouse myotubes | [ |
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| GCaMP1.6 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 480% | Presynaptic boutons of the | [ |
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| GCaMP2 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 390% | Beams of parallel fibers and granule cells of frontal cerebellar slices from transgenic mice | [ |
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| GCaMP3 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 1230% | Flies, worms and mice | [ |
| GCaMP4.1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | ND. | Xenopus laevis | [ |
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| GCaMP-HS | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 410% | Spinal motor neurons in transgenic zebrafish | [ |
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| GCaMP5 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | >940% | Cultured neurons and astrocytes, mouse retina; flies, worms, zebrafish and mice | [ |
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| Fast-GCaMP | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | >650% | Drosophila auditory neurons; superior cervical ganglion and neocortical pyramidal neurons | [ |
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| GCaMP6 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | >3600% | Cultured neurons; zebrafish, flies and mice | [ |
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| G-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 2500% | HeLa cells; rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
| R-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmApple | 1600% | HeLa cells; rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
| B-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEBFP | 700% | HeLa cells | [ |
| GEX-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 2600% | HeLa cells | [ |
| GEM-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpEGFP | 11,000% | HeLa cells; transgenic | [ |
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| CAR-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmPulm | 2700% | HeLa cells; mouse neocortical slice culture | [ |
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| R-GECO1.2 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmPulm | 3300% | HeLa cells and INS-1 cells | [ |
| O-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmOrange | 14,600% | HeLa cells | [ |
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| R-CaMP1.07 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmApple | 2870% | HeLa cells and hippocampal pyramidal neurons | [ |
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| Y-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmPapaya0.4 | 20,000% | HeLa cells and rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| REX-GECO1 | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmApple | 10,000% | Organotypic hippocampal slice cultures; albino tadpoles | [ |
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| GR-GECO | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpmMapple145 | 450% | HeLa cells and rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| LAR-GECO | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cp146mApple | 1000% | HeLa, HEK293, U2OS cells and rat hippocampal neurons | [ |
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| BCaMP1c | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpBFP | 200% | ND | [ |
| CyCaMP1a | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpCFP | 260% | ND | [ |
| YCaMP1b | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cpYFP | 920% | HEK293 cells | [ |
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| RCaMP1h | Single-FP | CaM, M13 | cp159mRuby | 1050% | HEK293 cells, neurons; worms, fly larvae, and zebrafish | [ |
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| RA-CaM-B-M13-GA | FPX | CaM, M13 | RA, B, GA | ND | HeLa cells | [ |
FRET (Förster Resonance Energy Transfer) and single-FP (Fluorescent protein) types indicate ratiometric and intensometric response, respectively;
Dynamic range here refers to the ratio of optical response in the fully activated indicator to the measured signal in the off state. Unless otherwise specified in the main text, the reported value refers to a positive relationship between Ca2+ and fluorescence intensity or ratio.
Figure 2Schematic representation of genetically encoded Ca2+ indicators
(A) YC-Nano is a FRET-based Ca2+ Indicator. CaM and M13 are sandwiched between ECFP and cp173Venus. Upon Ca2+ binding, conformational change induces an increase in FRET efficiency; (B) R-GECO1 is a red fluorescent GCaMP type Ca2+ Indicator based on a single red fluorescent protein. It consists of cpmApple, M13 fused to the N-terminal and CaM fused to the C-terminal. Upon Ca2+ binding, the conformational change of the CaM-M13 complex leads to local chromophore environment change, accompanying a large increase of the red fluorescence intensity of the sensor.
A List of genetically encoded voltage indicators.
| GEVIs | Sensing Module | Reporter Module | Dynamic Range (%) | τon, fast (ms) | τoff, fast (ms) | Selected Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FlaSh | Shaker K+ channel | GFP | 5.1 | 85 ± 10 | 160 ± 12 | [ | |
| SPARC | Rat μI skeletal muscle voltage-gated Na+ channel | GFP | 0.5 | <0.8 | N.A. | [ | |
| VSFP1 | Kv potassium channel | CFP, YFP | 1.8 ± 0.1 | 0.7 | N.A. | HEK cells | [ |
| VSFP2.1 | CiVSD | Cerulean, Citrine | 8.6 | 15 | 75 | PC12 cells | [ |
| VSFP2.3 | CiVSD | Cerulean, Citrine | 15.2 ± 0.2 | 3.0 ± 0.4 | 91.6 ± 4.2 | PC12 cells | [ |
| VSFP2.42 | CiVSD | mCitrine, mKate2 | 12.46 ± 1.0 | N.A. | N.A. | PC12 cells | [ |
| CiVSD-Kv3.1 chimera (C5) | Ci-VSP-Kv3.1 VSD chimeras | mCerulean, mCitrine | 14.8 ± 0.1 | 2.1 | 13.4 | PC12 cells | [ |
| VSFP-CR | CiVSD | Clover, mRuby2 | 12.7 | 5.4 | 90 | Hippocampal neurons | [ |
| VSF3.1 | CiVSD | Cerulean | 1.9 | 1.8 ± 0.3 | N.A. | PC12 cells | [ |
| VSFP3.1_mOrange2 | CiVSD | mOrange2 | 2.9 | 3.8 ± 0.3 | N.A. | PC12 cells and hippocampal neurons | [ |
| VSFP-Butterfly1.2 | CiVSD | mCitrine, mKate2 | 15.0 ± 0.7 | 1.0 ± 0.7 | 89.9 ± 5.2 | Cortical neurons, barrel cortex and hippocampal slices | [ |
| VSFP-Butterfly CY | Ci-VSP-Kv3.1 VSD chimeras | mCerulean, mCitrine | 2.1 ± 0.2 | 14.6 ± 0.5 | 14.7 ± 0.2 | HEK293 and PC12 cells; cortical neurons of living mice | [ |
| VSFP-Butterfly-YR | Ci-VSP-Kv3.1 VSD chimeras | mCitrine, mKate2 | 2.3 ± 0.2 | 25.1 ± 0.9 | 12.7 ± 0.1 | HEK293 and PC12 cells | [ |
| Mermaid | CiVSD | mUKG, mKOκ | 40 | 5–20 | 5–20 | Rat cardiomyocytes and cortical neurons | [ |
| Mermaid2 | CiVSD | CFP, YFP | 48.5 | 0.92 | 10.3 | Hippocampal neurons and living mice | [ |
| ArcLight Q239 | CiVSD | Super ecliptic pHluorin A227D | 35 | 9 | 17 | HEK293 cells and hippocampal neurons | [ |
| Chicken ArcLight-A173 | Chicken VSD | Super ecliptic pHluorin A227D | 9 | 4 | 9 | HEK293 cells and cortical neurons | [ |
| Bongwoori | CiVSD A154D/R217Q/R229I | Super ecliptic pHluorin A227D | ~16 | 8 | 7 | HEK293 cells and hippocampal neurons | [ |
| FlicR1 | CiVSD | cpmApple | 6.6 | 3.0 | 2.8 | HEK293 cells and hippocampal neurons and brain slices | [ |
| Marina | ArcLight A389 A390 V442 | 31 | 29.2 | 15.6 | HEK 293 cells and cortical neuronal cells | [ | |
| ASAP1 | GgVSD | cpsfGFP-OPT | ~18–29 | 2.1 | 2.0 | HEK293A cells and hippocampal neurons | [ |
| ASAP2s | ASAP1 R415Q | 38.7 | 5.2 | 24 | HEK293A cells, cardiomyocytes, | [ | |
| ASAP2f | ASAP1 (A147S ΔA148) | ~14–20 | 2.8 | 2.4 | [ | ||
| PROPS | Proteorhodopsin | 150 | 4.7 | N.A. | [ | ||
| Arch D95N | Arch-D95N | 60 | <1 | <1 | Rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| ArchEEQ | Arch-D95Q/D106E | 60 | ~5–15 | N.A. | Rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| ArchEEN | Arch-D95N/D106E | 20 | ~5–15 | N.A. | Rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| QuasAr1 | Arch-P60S/T80S/D95H/D106H/F161V | 32 | 0.05 | 0.07 | Rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| QuasAr2 | Arch-P60S/T80S/D95Q/D106H/F161V | 90 | 1.2 | 1.0 | Rat hippocampal neurons; hiPSC-derived neurons; organotypic brain slice | [ | |
| QuarsAr2-mOrange | QuarsAr2, mOrange | 10 | 3.9 | 4.3 | HEK293 cells and rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| QuarsAr2-mCitrine | QuarsAr2, mCitrine | 13.1 | 3.1 | 4.8 | HEK293 cells and rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| MacQ-mCitrine | 20 | 2.8 | 5.4 | Cultured neurons; neocortical tissue slices; dendrites of Purkinje neurons in live mice | [ | ||
| Archer1 | Arch-D95E/T99C | 85 | N.A. | N.A. | Rat hippocampal neurons and sensory neurons in behaving | [ | |
| Archer2 | Arch-D95E/T99C/A225M | 60 | N.A. | N.A. | Rat hippocampal neurons | [ | |
| Ace-mNeon | 8.5–12 | 0.36–1.1 | 0.42–1.3 | Neurons, awake mice and flies | [ |
Dynamic range (%) here refers to the absolute value of fluorescence change (ΔF) normalized by the initial fluorescence (F0), expressed as % ΔF/F0, following 100 mV depolarization or repolarization steps. Values are steady-state or peak changes, as determined in the original reports. One has to be cautious when comparing these numbers, because experimental conditions could be different;
The value here refers to one of the representative values measured in one cell type under a certain experimental condition specified in the original work, and may differ in other publications repeating the original work;
Unlike other similar GEVIs (e.g., ArcLight, ASAP1, ASAP2s, ASAP2f, and Ace-mNeon) that have a “negative” response (i.e., decrease in fluorescence upon neuronal activation), Marina was engineered for an inverted response (i.e., increase in fluorescence upon neuronal activation).
Figure 3Schematic representation of genetically encoded voltage indicators
(A) VSFP-butterfly1.2 is a FRET-based voltage sensor consists of mCtirine, CiVSD and mKate. Membrane depolarization induces a conformational change of CiVSD, which alters the FRET efficiency between the donor and acceptor; (B) ASAP1 is a single FP based voltage sensor made by inserting cpGFP in the S3–S4 linker of GgVSD. The conformational change of GgVSD can be transduced to cpGFP, leading to voltage dependent green fluorescence change; (C) ArcLight consists of Ci-VSD and super ecliptic pHluorin (A227D). Compared to other FP, this mutant FP has a higher sensitivity to the conformational change of CiVSD; (D) MacQ-mCitrine is a hybrid voltage reporter consisting a rhodopsin (MacQ) as FRET acceptor and a yellow fluorescent protein (mCitrine) as FRET donor. Membrane depolarization protonates the Schiff base of the bound retinal (orange star) cofactor in rhodopsin, shifting the cofactor absorption spectrum and enhancing FRET efficiency from mCitrine to the weakly fluorescent retinal cofactor.
A List of genetically encoded indicators for synaptic activity.
| Indicators | Type | Sensing Module | Reporting Module | Dynamic Range | Selected Applications | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FLIPE | FRET | GltI | ECFP, Venus | <5% | Rat hippocampal neurons and PC12 cells | [ |
| GluSnFR | FRET | GltI | ECFP, Citrine | 7.1% | Hippocampal neurons | [ |
| SuperGluSnFR | FRET | GltI | ECFP, Citrine | 44% | Hippocampal neurons | [ |
| iGluSnFR | Single-FP | GltI | cpEGFP | 450% | Cultured neurons; retina, worms, zebrafish and mice | [ |
| SynaptopHluorin | Single-FP | pHluorin | VAMP2-pHluorin | 8–20% | Hippocampal neurons; RBL-2H3 cells | [ |
| sypHy | Single-FP | pHluorin | synaptophysin-pHluorin | N.A. | Hippocampal neurons | [ |
| vGpH | Single-FP | pHluorin | vGlut1-pHluorin | N.A. | Hippocampal boutons | [ |
| VGLUT1-mOrange2 | Single-FP | mOrange2 | VGLUT1-mOrange2 | 16% | Hippocampal boutons | [ |
| sypHTomato | Single-FP | pHTomato | Synaptophysin-pHTomato | 5–25% | CA3-CA1 hippocampal neurons | [ |
Figure 4Schematic representation of genetically encoded indicators for synaptic activity
(A) iGluSnFR is a genetically encoded single-FP-based glutamate indicator which contains a cpGFP inserted into the bacterial periplasmic glutamate binding domain (GlutI). Glutamate binding induced conformation change of Gltl results in deprotonation and fluorescence enhancement of cpGFP; (B) sypHTomato is a genetically encoded fluorescent reporter for synaptic vesicle recycling. It consists of a pH-sensitive red fluorescent protein (pHTomato) fused to the C-terminus of the vesicular protein domain Synaptophysin that localizes the probe to vesicle membrane. During membrane fusion, FP is switched from the low pH environment of vesicle to the neutral extracellular space, which leads to pH-dependent fluorescence changes. Subsequent vesicle recycling events reset the pH cycle.