| Literature DB >> 29962936 |
Zoé Christenson Wick1, Esther Krook-Magnuson1.
Abstract
Optogenetics is a powerful and rapidly expanding set of techniques that use genetically encoded light sensitive proteins such as opsins. Through the selective expression of these exogenous light-sensitive proteins, researchers gain the ability to modulate neuronal activity, intracellular signaling pathways, or gene expression with spatial, directional, temporal, and cell-type specificity. Optogenetics provides a versatile toolbox and has significantly advanced a variety of neuroscience fields. In this review, using recent epilepsy research as a focal point, we highlight how the specificity, versatility, and continual development of new optogenetic related tools advances our understanding of neuronal circuits and neurological disorders. We additionally provide a brief overview of some currently available optogenetic tools including for the selective expression of opsins.Entities:
Keywords: archaerhodopsin; cell type specificity; channelrhodopsin; halorhodopsin; intersectional genetics; neuronal circuitry; parvalbumin; seizures
Year: 2018 PMID: 29962936 PMCID: PMC6010559 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00151
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Overview of several light-sensitive proteins, their variants, and their effect on neurons. Throughout, refer to Box 1 for more information on the light-sensitive proteins listed. (A) The non-selective cation channels are perhaps the best-known family of excitatory opsins, with several variants stemming from the blue-light activated wild-type channelrhodopsin-2 found in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. These non-selective cation channels allow for passive flow of protons and potassium, sodium, and calcium ions along their electrochemical gradient upon photostimulation with light at approximately 470 nm. In mammalian neurons, opening of these channels results in depolarization of the intracellular space, thus increasing the likelihood of action potential generation. The inward flow of protons has also been shown to affect intracellular pH. Several non-selective cation channel opsin variants are listed including a selection of the many blue-light activated opsin variants: ChR2(H134R), ChR2(C128X), ChiEF, ChETA and ChR2(ET/TC) variants; the red-shifted opsins: VChR1, C1V1, Chrimson and ReaChR; and the step function opsin (SFO) ChR2 (C128X), and stabilized SFO ChR2(C128S/D156A). (B) The inward chloride pumps are, to date, perhaps the most commonly used family of inhibitory opsins. Several of these inward chloride pumps, including the one listed (eNpHR3.0) are variants of the wild-type halorhodopsin (HR) found in Natronomonas pharaonis. These opsins are activated by 580 nm light and pump one chloride ion into the cell for each photon of light. The red-shifted opsin Jaws is a cruxhalorhodopsin derived from Haloarcula salinarum engineered to produce large inhibitory photocurrents induced by red light exposure. These inward chloride pumps hyperpolarize the intracellular space by increasing the intracellular chloride concentration, thus decreasing the likelihood of action potential generation. (C) There are several outward proton pumps used in mammalian neuron systems to silence neuronal activity as well. The outward proton pump opsins listed are eArch3.0, eArchT3.0 and eMac3.0, though there are several other versions not listed here. Each has enhanced membrane trafficking and slightly differing photoactivation/deactivation kinetics and resulting photocurrents. Peak photoactivation for eMac3.0 is stimulated by green wavelengths of light and is thus blue-shifted compared to eArch3.0 and eArchT3.0. Each of these outward proton pumps effectively inhibits neuronal activity by hyperpolarizing the intracellular space when protons are pumped out of the cell. Reducing the intracellular concentration of protons also reduces intracellular acidity. (D) G-protein coupled receptors indirectly affect neuronal activity by directly activating G proteins and their downstream targets, producing a signaling cascade. Opto-XRs are a family of G-protein coupled receptor opsins including the specific Gq-protein and Gs-protein coupled variants. (E) Chloride channel opsins allow passive flow of chloride ions down their electrochemical gradient upon photostimulation. In healthy adult mammalian neurons, photoactivation of these chloride channel opsins typically hyperpolarizes the intracellular space, in addition to decreasing membrane resistance, and thus reduce the likelihood of action potential generation. (F) There are several other optogenetic systems available that allow for photo-sensitive alteration of intracellular protein activity. Illustrated here is the irreversibly activated photocleavable protein, PhoCl. Other optogenetic protein alteration systems allow reversible alteration of protein-protein interactions, including FLIP, LOVTRAP and opto-SOS. Additional tools allow for light-altered gene expression, including LITEs and VP-EL222.
Figure 2Photoactivation spectra. Action spectra from several opsins; each has a different peak excitation wavelength (shown here) as well as different photocurrent amplitudes and activation and deactivation kinetics (not shown here). ChR2(H134R; Nagel et al., 2005) is maximally excited by blue wavelengths of roughly 450 nm (illustrated activation spectrum for ChR2(H134R) modified from reference; Lin et al., 2009). eNpHR3.0 (Gradinaru et al., 2010) is a commonly used HR variant that is maximally excited at 590 nm (eNpHR3.0 activation spectrum modified from reference; Gradinaru et al., 2010). eArchT3.0, an outward proton pump, is maximally excited at roughly 520 nm (spectrum modified from reference; Mattis et al., 2012). Chrimson is a non-selective cation channel opsin, maximally activated at roughly 590 nm (spectrum modified from reference; Klapoetke et al., 2014). The diverse peak excitation wavelengths make it theoretically possible to do multi-color optogenetic experiments selectively targeting and manipulating different cell populations with reduced cross-talk (Gradinaru et al., 2010; Klapoetke et al., 2014). Note that different experimental conditions can produce different activation spectra; where possible, the illustrated activation spectra are taken from the first manuscript detailing the specific opsin variant illustrated. For an article directly comparing the induced photocurrents of various opsins, including some illustrated here, the reader is referred to reference Mattis et al. (2012).
Figure 3Cre-dependent strategies for achieving cell-type specific opsin expression. (A) Schematics of Cre-dependent expression strategies of the excitatory opsin channelrhodopsin (ChR) tagged with yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). (i) Two loxP sites (open triangles) flank a STOP codon that prevents expression of the ChR-YFP construct. Cre can mediate either inversion or excision of DNA located between two loxP sites. If the loxP sites are oriented in the same direction, Cre excises the DNA between the two sites; if the loxP sites are oriented in opposing directions, Cre inverts the DNA between the two sites. In the case shown here, Cre mediates excision of the floxed STOP codon, allowing expression of the opsin. (ii) The FLEX/DIO system utilizes one set of mutant loxP sites (closed triangles) and one set of typical loxP sites (open triangles). Each loxP site will only pair with its match. In this example, Cre mediates inversion of the opsin DNA between the mutant loxP sites. Cre then mediates excision of the mutant between the non-mutant loxP sites, preventing the DNA from flipping back into the anti-sense direction. (iii) The INTRSECT system utilizes both Cre- and Flp-mediated recombination to achieve opsin expression in cell populations defined by two markers. The Cre- and Flp-dependent viral vector illustrated is also known as a Cre-on/Flp-on system, or more simply: Con/Fon. Other options for INTRSECT approaches that allow selective opsin expression are diagramed below, including Cre-on/Flp-off (Con/Foff) and Cre-off/Flp-on (Coff/Fon). Con/Fon vector schematic modified with permission from Fenno et al. (2014). (B) Options for achieving cell-type specific expression using the floxed STOP system (i), the FLEX/DIO system (ii), or the INTRSECT system (iii) in mice. Transgenic mice expressing Cre are shown in yellow; mice with ultimate opsin expression through transgenic and/or viral methods are indicated in green. (i) To achieve Cre-dependent opsin expression using the floxed STOP system, one can use a transgenic approach in which a Cre-expressing mouse is crossed with a mouse expressing a Cre-dependent opsin, resulting in offspring that express the opsin Cre-dependently. Viral based methods for Cre expression are also possible, as shown for ii and iii. Viral vectors using the floxed STOP system for opsin expression are also theoretically possible but can result in unwanted/leaky expression of the opsin. Thus, the FLEX/DIO system for Cre-dependent opsin expression was created. (ii) In the FLEX/DIO system, a Cre-dependent opsin vector can be delivered into a transgenic Cre+ mouse or a mouse previously injected with a vector for expression of Cre. (iii) The Con/Fon INTRSECT viruses lead to opsin expression when injected into either Cre+/Flp+ transgenic mice, Cre+ mice injected with a vector encoding Flp-recombinase, Flp+ mice injected with a vector encoding Cre-recombinase (not shown), or mice previously injected with vectors encoding Cre and Flp-recombinases.
A few examples of optogenetics for research in models of neurological disease.
| Disease | Optogenetic tools used | Findings in brief | Key reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease (AD) | Viral delivery of Cre-dependent ChR2 into CA1 of the hippocampus of PV-Cre AD mice | Optogenetically stimulating hippocampal PV cells, thus driving gamma frequency oscillations, reduced levels of amyloid-beta in AD mice | Iaccarino et al. ( |
| Alzheimer’s disease | cFos-mediated expression of ChR2 in dentate gyrus engram cells; oChIEF expressed under the CaMKIIα promoter injected into the entorhinal cortex | Optogenetically activating dentate engram cells rescues context-dependent memories in amnesic early AD mice. Optogenetic potentiation of entorhinal cortex inputs to the dentate gyrus engram cells resulted in long-term rescue of context-dependent recall in amnesic early AD mice. | Roy et al. ( |
| Alzheimer’s disease | ChR2 expressed under the CaMKIIα promoter injected bilaterally into the hippocampus | Increasing neuronal activity (optogenetically or otherwise) increases tau propagation and pathologies in a mouse model of AD | Wu et al. ( |
| Alzheimer’s disease | Stabilized step function opsin expressed under the CaMKIIα promoter in the lateral entorhinal cortex | Increasing neuronal activity (optogenetically or otherwise) increases amyloid-beta pathologies in a mouse model of AD; optogenetic stimulation also produced behavioral seizure phenotypes | Yamamoto et al. ( |
| Ischemia | Stimulation of ChR2(C128S) to increase acidity or ArchT to alkalize astrocytes and Bergmann glia in cerebellar slices and | Activation of ChR2(C128S) in glia resulted in glial acidification and increased excitotoxicity in Purkinje cells after cerebellar ischemia. Activation of ArchT in glia resulted in glial alkalization and reduced brain damage after ischemia. | Beppu et al. ( |
| Ischemia | ChR2 expressed under the Thy1 promoter; light delivered bilaterally to activate cortical neurons in a variety of regions | Brain connectivity following stroke undergoes widespread changes, with non-uniform changes in connectivity in the peri-infarct regions and decreases in connectivity even in areas distal from the infarct followed by recovery of some connections and sprouting of other compensatory connections | Lim et al. ( |
| Migraine, ischemia | ChR2 expressed under the Thy1 promoter; light delivered transcranially to activate layer V cortical projection neurons | Developed a non-invasive model of cortical spreading depression using transcranial optogenetic stimulation | Houben et al. ( |
| Multiple sclerosis | ChR2 expressed under the Thy1 promoter; light delivered unilaterally to the premotor area to primarily activate layer V cortical projection neurons | Optogenetic activation of premotor neurons at physiologic frequencies elicits oligodendrogenesis, increases myelination within the premotor cortex and subcortical white matter, and improves motor function in the corresponding limb | Gibson et al. ( |
| Parkinson’s disease | HR or ChR2 expressed under the CaMKIIα promoter; ChR2 expressed under the GFAP promoter; ChR2 expressed under the Thy1 promoter. Light delivered to the subthalamic nucleus (STN). | Optogenetic manipulation of the STN reduced disordered movement in parkinsonian mice; this effect was primarily mediated by the cortical layer V projecting afferents to the STN. | Gradinaru et al. ( |
| Parkinson’s disease | Viral delivery of ChR2 or HR under the CaMKIIα promoter into the striatum or directly onto slice cultures. | Stem cell-derived dopaminergic neurons functionally integrate in a Parkinson’s model and form bidirectional connections between grafted dopamine neurons and host cells. | Tønnesen et al. ( |
| Parkinson’s disease | Viral delivery of Cre-dependent ChR2 into the midbrain of DAT-Cre mice; light targeted bilaterally to dopamine axons in the dorsal striatum | Dopaminergic inputs to the striatum perform rapid phasic signaling that is capable of triggering locomotion in mice. | Howe and Dombeck ( |
| Parkinson’s disease | ChR2 expressed under the Chat promoter; light targeted at the striatum | Striatal cholinergic interneurons mediate exaggerated beta oscillations and induce parkinsonian-like motor deficits. | Kondabolu et al. ( |
| Parkinson’s disease | Viral delivery of Cre-dependent ChR2 into the dorsomedial striatum or globus pallidus externa of D1-Cre, PV-Cre, or Lhx6-iCre mice. For non-specific optogenetic manipulation, ChR2 or ArchT were virally delivered under hSyn or CAG promoters, respectively. | Elevating activity of PV+ Globus Pallidus externa (GPe) neurons over that of Lim homeobox 6 (Lhx6) GPe neurons rescues movement in parkinsonian dopamine depleted mice and provides long-term attenuation of pathological basal ganglia activity | Mastro et al. ( |
In vivo optogenetics for studying epilepsy.
| Type of epilepsy | Model(s) used | Optogenetic tools used | Findings in brief | Key reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absence epilepsy | Genetic; spontaneous seizures | Optogenetic activation of cerebellar nucleus neurons virally expressing ChR2 under the hSyn promoter | Closed-loop on-demand optogenetic activation of cerebellar nuclei stopped generalized spike-and-wave discharges characteristic of thalamocortical, absence seizures. | Kros et al. ( |
| Absence epilepsy | Genetic; spontaneous seizures | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying HR or SSFO under the CaMKIIα promoter to induce opsin expression in excitatory neurons of the somatosensory thalamus | Optogenetically inducing thalamocortical rebound phasic spiking unilaterally (using HR) induces bilateral spike-wave discharges in epileptic animals, while optogenetically inducing tonic spiking unilaterally (using SSFO) aborts bilateral spike-wave discharges. | Sorokin et al. ( |
| Absence epilepsy and forebrain and brainstem seizures | Systemic pentylenetetrazole; focally applied bicuculline (piriform cortex); gamma butyrolactone; audiogenic seizures in genetically epilepsy prone rats | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying ChR2 under the hSyn promoter to the deep/intermediate layers of the superior colliculus | Optogenetic activation of the deep/intermediate layers of the superior colliculus suppressed behavioral and electrographic seizures originating in the forebrain, brainstem, and thalamocortical seizure networks. | Soper et al. ( |
| Forebrain and brainstem seizures | Systemic pentylenetetrazole; audiogenic seizures in genetically epilepsy prone mice | ChR2 was expressed in serotonergic neurons under the tryptophan hydroxylase 2 promoter; light targeted to the midline dorsal raphe | Optogenetic activation of the dorsal raphe serotonergic neurons for periods immediately prior to seizure initiation reduced the rate of seizure-induced respiratory arrest | Zhang et al. ( |
| Cortical stroke-induced thalamocortical epilepsy | Photothrombosis in the somatosensory cortex; spontaneous seizures | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying HR under the CaMKIIα promoter into the somatosensory thalamus | Closed-loop on-demand optogenetic manipulation of excitatory thalamocortical neurons interrupts cortical seizure activity. | Paz et al. ( |
| Cortical epilepsy | Tetanus toxin in motor cortex; spontaneous seizures | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying eNpHR2.0 under the CaMKIIα promoter into the motor cortex/seizure focus | Optogenetic inhibition of excitatory motor cortex neurons reduces epileptiform activity. | Wykes et al. ( |
| Cortical seizures | 4-aminopyridine applied in barrel cortex; acute seizures | Delivered Cre-dependent virus carrying ChETA to the S1 barrel cortex in PV-Cre mice | Optogenetic activation of PV+ cells during ictal activity terminated seizures; optogenetic activation of PV cells during interictal periods-initiated seizures. | Assaf and Schiller ( |
| Cortical seizures | 4-aminopyridine applied in somatosensory cortex; acute seizures | ChR2 was expressed in GABAergic neurons under the VGAT promoter; light targeted unilaterally to the somatosensory cortex | Optogenetic activation of GABAergic cells in hyper-excitable somatosensory cortex during interictal periods initiated ictal-like events in a GABAA receptor dependent manner. | Chang et al. ( |
| Cortical seizures | Optogenetically induced seizures in motor cortex | ChR2 was virally expressed in the motor cortex under the CaMKIIα promoter (for seizure induction). For inhibition of different groups of neurons, either a synapsin promoter or PV-Cre, SOM-Cre, VIP-Cre, Emx1-Cre, or Dlxl12b-Cre mice were injected with a Cre-dependent virus carrying eArch3.0 | After optogenetic induction of seizures, optogenetic inhibition of VIP+ neurons inhibited seizures, while inhibition of other populations produced mixed results. | Khoshkhoo et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Intrahippocampal bicuculline methiodide; acute epileptiform bursting | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying HR under the hSyn promoter into the ventro-posterior hippocampus; light targeted to CA1/CA2 of the hippocampus | Optogenetic inhibition of hippocampal cells attenuates epileptiform activity in presence of GABAA receptor antagonist. | Berglind et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Intraperitoneal kainate, anesthetized animals | Delivered Cre-dependent virus carrying eArch3.0 into the hippocampus of CaMKIIα-Cre mice followed by injection of green light-emitting upconversion nanoparticles into the hippocampus; near-infrared light was delivered transcranially. | Upconversion nanoparticle-mediated optogenetic inhibition of neural activity reduced c-Fos immunoreactivity in granule cells of the dentate gyrus following kainate administration. | Chen et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe epilepsy | Intrahippocampal kainate; spontaneous seizures | Delivered Cre-dependent virus carrying ArchT contralateral to prior WGA-Cre injection to selectively express the opsin in unilateral dentate gyrus mossy cells. In other experiments, Crlc-Cre mice were injected with Cre-dependent virus carrying either ChR2 or eNpHR3.0 | Closed-loop on-demand optogenetic excitation of mossy cells ipsilateral or contralateral to the presumed seizure focus reduces behavioral seizure frequency. | Bui et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | 4-aminopyridine applied unilaterally in CA3 of hippocampus; acute seizures | ChR2 was expressed under the Thy1 promoter in transgenic mice; light was delivered unilaterally to the seizure focus (CA3 of the hippocampus) | High frequency optogenetic activation of ChR2-expressing neurons (primarily inhibitory) can provide transient seizure control. | Chiang et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe epilepsy | Intrahippocampal kainate; spontaneous seizures | HR was Cre-dependently expressed by crossing Ai39 mice with CaMKIIα-Cre mice; ChR2 was Cre-dependently expressed by crossing Ai32 mice with PV-Cre mice; light targeted to the hippocampus | Closed-loop on-demand optogenetic inhibition of hippocampal principal neurons ipsilateral or activation of PV+ inhibitory neurons ipsilateral or contralateral to the presumed seizure focus inhibits seizures | Krook-Magnuson et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe epilepsy | Intrahippocampal kainate; spontaneous seizures | ChR2 was Cre-dependently expressed in PV+ neurons by crossing Ai32 mice with PV-Cre mice, or, to more specifically target Purkinje cells, PcP2-Cre mice; light targeted to midline or lateral cerebellum | Closed-loop on-demand optogenetic activation of PV+ neurons, including Purkinje cells, in the lateral cerebellum decreases hippocampal seizure duration, and activation in the midline cerebellum decreases seizure duration and reduces seizure frequency. | Krook-Magnuson et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe epilepsy | Intrahippocampal kainate; spontaneous seizures | ChR2 or HR was Cre-dependently expressed in dentate gyrus granule cells by crossing Ai32 or Ai39 mice with POMC-Cre mice, respectively | Activation of dentate gyrus granule cells in epileptic (or naïve) mice can induce or worsen seizures. Closed-loop on-demand inhibition of granule cells can efficiently stop seizures. | Krook-Magnuson et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | 4-aminopyridine applied unilaterally in CA3 of hippocampus; acute seizures | Used transgenic mice expressing ChR2 under the Thy1 promoter; and to specifically target inhibitory neurons, used a transgenic mouse line expressing ChR2 under the VGAT promoter | Low frequency optogenetic stimulation of hippocampal neurons reduced seizure activity. | Ladas et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Intrahippocampal kainate; intra-amygdala kainate; acute seizures | ChR2 expression under the VGAT promoter in a transgenic mouse line; delivered Cre-dependent ChR2 or HR virally into the dentate gyrus of GAD-Cre mice | Optogenetic activation of inhibitory neurons in the dentate gyrus suppresses ictal activity in the dentate and in the entorhinal cortex. Optogenetic activation of inhibitory neurons in the entorhinal cortex inhibits ictal activity in the entorhinal cortex but not dentate. | Lu et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Optogenetically evoked hippocampal seizures | ChR2 expressed under a Thy1.2 promoter in transgenic rats; ChR2 expressed under a beta-actin promoter; light delivered to the hippocampus, thalamus, amygdala, and sensorimotor cortex | Repetitive pulse photostimulation to the opsin-expressing hippocampus induced seizure-like afterdischarges that were sustained and propagated along the longitudinal axis of the hippocampus. | Osawa et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Lithium-pilocarpine elicited seizures; acute seizures | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying HR under the CaMKIIα promoter into the hippocampus | Optogenetic inhibition of hippocampal pyramidal cells prior to seizure onset delayed initiation of status epilepticus and altered seizure development. | Sukhotinsky et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Optogenetically evoked hippocampal seizures | Unilaterally delivered virus carrying ChR2 under the CaMKIIα promoter into the dorsal or intermediate hippocampus | High-frequency optogenetic activation of principal cells in the intermediate hippocampus during fMRI showed recruitment of widespread cortical and subcortical networks. | Weitz et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe seizures | Electrical hippocampal kindling | Used a transgenic mouse line expressing ChR2 under the VGAT promoter to target inhibitory neurons; or viral delivery of Cre-dependent ChR2 in mice expressing Cre in PV+ or SOM+ cells; or viral delivery of Cre-dependent Arch or HR in mice expressing Cre under the CaMKIIα promoter to inhibit excitatory cells; light delivered to the subiculum or CA3. | Activation of GABAergic neurons, or direct inhibition of excitatory cells with HR or Arch, in the subiculum delayed acquisition of secondary generalized seizures during kindling. In fully kindled animals, activation of subicular PV+ cells had a pro-ictal effect while activation of SOM+ cells inhibited ictal activity. While activation of inhibitory neurons in the subiculum had a pro-ictal effect in kindled animals, activation of inhibitory neurons in CA3 inhibited ictal activity. In kindled animals, direct inhibition of excitatory subicular cells with Arch, but not HR, inhibited ictal activity. | Wang et al. ( |
| Temporal lobe, forebrain and brainstem seizures | Intrahippocampal bicuculline methiodide; systemic pentylenetetrazole; acute seizures | Bilaterally delivered virus carrying the inhibitory luminopsin (iLMO) under the CaMKIIα promoter into the dentate gyrus and/or the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT) | Activation of iLMO in the principal cells of the dentate gyrus or glutamatergic neurons of the ANT prior to the seizure delayed seizure onset and reduced seizure duration. Activation of iLMO in both the dentate gyrus and, simultaneously, the ANT had an additive effect, reducing seizure duration and severity. | Tung et al. ( |
Figure 4On-demand and closed-loop seizure intervention strategies. (A) Options for the timing of various seizure interventions illustrated relative to spontaneous seizure events (in red, bottom trace). Traditional seizure treatment options, including pharmacological and some neuromodulatory approaches, fall within the intermittent intervention strategy in which the therapy is delivered on a prescribed schedule irrespective of seizure timing (green). Other intervention strategies, such as surgical resection of the seizure focus, are clearly permanent and are also not sensitive to the timing or frequency of seizures (blue). In contrast, on-demand seizure interventions are applied only at the time of seizure prediction/detection and are therefore only used when necessary (orange). This on-demand method of seizure intervention may lead to fewer negative side effects and intervention-related complications. (B) An example of a closed-loop system for on-demand optogenetic seizure intervention in mice. EEG signals (blue) are amplified (Amp) and digitized (A/D) and dispatched into custom MATLAB software for real-time analysis of the signal power, frequency, and several spike characteristics (including spike number, width, amplitude, and rate). Threshold levels (green) for these characteristics are selected to achieve accurate seizure detection in each animal. A trigger signal is then sent to the digitizer and on to the LASER to begin a light protocol for a given percentage of detected seizures (in the illustrated system, 50% of detected seizures would be selected in a random fashion (RND) to trigger light delivery). COMP: digital comparator; USB: universal serial bus. (C) Representative spontaneous seizures recorded from the hippocampus of a mouse previously injected with kainate (KA) and which expresses HR in granule cells. Time of seizure detection by real-time analysis using custom MATLAB software (see also B) illustrated with vertical blue bar. The top trace shows a detected seizure that did not receive light intervention. In contrast, the bottom trace shows a seizure that triggered light delivery (orange horizontal bar). Note that the seizure in the bottom trace is quickly terminated after light delivery. (D) Summary data for one mouse showing a histogram of post-detection seizure durations with no light intervention (gray hashed bars) compared to those that did receive light intervention (orange solid bars). In these experiments (C,D), light (orange bar) was delivered ipsilateral to the site of previous KA injection (red in schematic of coronal section). Scale bar (D) = 0.2 mV, 5 s. (A) modified with permission after Figure 1A from Krook-Magnuson et al. (2015b) (B) from Krook-Magnuson et al. (2013). (C,D) modified with permission from Krook-Magnuson et al. (2015a).
Figure 5Optogenetic manipulation and circuit dissection of inhibitory PV cells in a mouse model of chronic temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). (A) PV-Cre mice were crossed with mice expressing ChR2 in a Cre-dependent manner. Offspring of this cross expressed ChR2 selectively in PV cells. These mice received a unilateral intrahippocampal kainate (KA) injection to model chronic TLE. Blue light was targeted to the dorsal CA1 region of the hippocampus for optogenetic activation of hippocampal PV cells. Data from these mice are shown in (A–D). (B) An example seizure where no blue light was delivered (top trace), and where blue light was delivered (bottom trace). Green bars indicate time of seizure detection by the closed-loop algorithm (see Figure 4). Scale bars: 5 s, 100 μV. (C,D) Post-detection seizure duration of detected seizures where no blue light was delivered (gray hashed bars), and where blue light was delivered (filled bars). In (C,D), see inset schematics of light delivery (purple probe) relative to the hippocampus previously injected with KA (red). On-demand light delivery to activate PV cells increases the percentage of seizures stopping within 5 s of seizure detection, whether light was delivered ipsilateral (C) or contralateral (D) to the site previously injected with KA. (E) After an injection of the retrograde tracer Fluorogold (FG) into the left hippocampus (i.e., the hippocampus previously injected with KA or saline), the PV cells in the right hippocampus were analyzed for FG colocalization either 2 weeks, 1 month, 4 months, or 6 months following KA or saline. In the saline control mice (data collapsed across time points) approximately 0.5% of PV cells in the right hippocampus were colabeled with FG. Two weeks following KA, there was a slight, but non-significant decrease in the percentage of PV cells colabeled with FG followed by a progressive increase (asterisk indicates P value of less than 0.01; 6-month KA vs. saline controls). (F) Commissurally projecting PV cell axons were visualized and measured in a PV-Cre mouse line injected in the right hippocampus with a Cre-dependent GFP virus. Six months post-KA (red), there are significantly longer axons (more than 100x longer) in the dentate gyrus from commissurally projecting PV cells when compared to the 6-month post-saline controls. (A–D) modified with permission after Krook-Magnuson et al. (2013). (E,F) modified with permission after Christenson Wick et al. (2017).
Figure 6Example of a retrograde viral vector-based approach to selectively target deep and superficial pyramidal cells of the hippocampus (HC). Retrograde viral vector-based approaches to opsin delivery (such as WGA-Cre, AAV2-retro, or CAV) may be used to independently target and manipulate cells with distinct projection targets. In the illustrated hypothetical example, this method is used to separately target and manipulate deep and superficial pyramidal cells of the hippocampus in the same mouse. Such an approach could be used, for example, to test the hypothesis that deep and superficial pyramidal cells may contribute uniquely to hippocampal seizures or their spread. Superficial CA1 pyramidal cells (that is, those on the stratum radiatum side of the pyramidal cell layer) project to the medial temporal cortex (mTC) while deep pyramidal cells project to the nucleus accumbens (NAc). Therefore, by injecting a retrogradely transported viral vector carrying a blue-light activated opsin (e.g., ChR2, shown in blue) into the mTC, one could selectively target and manipulate superficial (and not deep) pyramidal cells. Likewise, by injecting a retrogradely transported viral vector carrying a red-shifted opsin (e.g., Chrimson, shown in red) into the NAc, one could selectively target and manipulate deep pyramidal cells. As these opsins have sufficiently distinct activation spectra, the two populations of neurons could be independently manipulated in the same animal. Inset illustrates a portion of stratum pyramidale in CA1 of the hippocampus, with schematic expression of ChR2 (blue) in superficial and Chrimson (red) in deep pyramidal cells.