| Literature DB >> 31057183 |
Navjeevan S Soor1,2, Peter Quicke1,2, Carmel L Howe1,2, Kuin T Pang2,3, Mark A A Neil4, Simon R Schultz1,2, Amanda J Foust1,2,5.
Abstract
All optical neurophysiology allows manipulation and readout of neural network activity with single-cell spatial resolution and millisecond temporal resolution. Neurons can be made to express proteins that actuate transmembrane currents upon light absorption, enabling optical control of membrane potential and action potential signalling. In addition, neurons can be genetically or synthetically labelled with fluorescent reporters of changes in intracellular calcium concentration or membrane potential. Thus, to optically manipulate and readout neural activity in parallel, two spectra are involved: the action spectrum of the actuator, and the absorption spectrum of the fluorescent reporter. Due to overlap in these spectra, previous all-optical neurophysiology paradigms have been hindered by spurious activation of neuronal activity caused by the readout light. Here, we pair the blue-green absorbing optogenetic actuator, Chronos, with a deep red-emitting fluorescent calcium reporter CaSiR-1. We show that cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with Chronos do not exhibit transmembrane currents when illuminated with wavelengths and intensities suitable for exciting one-photon CaSiR-1 fluorescence. We then demonstrate crosstalk-free, high signal-to-noise ratio CaSiR-1 red fluorescence imaging at 100 frames s-1 of Chronos-mediated calcium transients evoked in neurons with blue light pulses at rates up to 20 Hz. These results indicate that the spectral separation between red light excited fluorophores, excited efficiently at or above 640 nm, with blue-green absorbing opsins such as Chronos, is sufficient to avoid spurious opsin actuation by the imaging wavelengths and therefore enable crosstalk-free all-optical neuronal manipulation and readout.Entities:
Keywords: Chronos; calcium indicator; crosstalk; functional imaging; neuromodulation; neuron; optogenetics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31057183 PMCID: PMC6466639 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6463/aaf944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys D Appl Phys ISSN: 0022-3727 Impact factor: 3.207
Figure 1.The photostimulation and epifluorescence imaging system (not to scale). (a) A 490 nm LED (LED1, blue lines) was collimated by a f = 16 mm aspheric condenser lens (L1), and passed through a field stop (FS1) before entering a filter cube containing a 475/28 nm excitation filter (Ex1), 515 nm long pass emission filter (Em1), and 495 nm long-pass dichroic (Dc1). A 660 nm LED (LED2, red lines) was collimated by a f = 16 mm aspheric condenser lens (L2), and passed through a field stop (FS2) before entering a filter cube containing a 628/40 nm excitation filter (Ex2), 692/40 nm long pass emission filter (Em2), and 660 nm long-pass dichroic (Dc2). Both LEDs are set up as Köhler illumination paths through a 25×, NA = 1.0 objective. Finally, epifluorescence (solid red area) was collected through the same objective and focussed by a 180 mm tube lens (LT) on to an ORCA Flash 4 camera (sCMOS), light direction indicated by dark red arrows). (b) A plot showing the spectral characteristics of the optical system. The blue line on the lower plot shows the action spectrum of Chronos, the black and red lines show the excitation and emission spectra, respectively, of CaSiR-1, and the dashed red line shows the transmission characteristics of the red emission filter (Em2, FF01-692/40-25, Semrock). The upper two plots show the spectral distributions of LED light onto the sample, which are the products of the normalised LED emission spectra with the excitation filter percent transmission curves, for Chronos (LED1, dotted blue line) and CaSiR-1 (LED2, dotted red line). The dark red area shows the collected wavelengths of CaSiR-1 fluorescence. (a) [5] (2014) ©. With permission of Springer. (b) Reprinted with permission from [43]. Copyright (2011) American Chemical Society.
Figure 2.Blue light, but not red light pulses, evoke photocurrents in Chronos-expressing CHO cells. Voltage clamp, whole cell recordings of a Chronos-expressing CHO cell (a) when stimulated with (b) blue light and (c) red light, both at increasing illumination power densities. The horizontal blue and red lines above the voltage-clamp traces represent 5 ms long red and blue LED pulses incident on the patched cell respectively. (d) The average induced photocurrent of Chronos-expressing cells increased with the blue LED power density, but remained zero with increased red LED power density. The graph shows the average currents measured in N = 4 cells, across 16 trials for blue light, and 13 trials for red light. Vertical lines represent the standard error of the mean (S.E.M); S.E.M values for the red light data series are too small to be seen on this scale. The blue shaded area represents the power densities used to photostimulate Chronos-expressing brain slices; the red shaded area represents the range of power densities used to image CaSiR-1 fluorescence in the brain slice preparations.
Figure 3.By staining Chronos-expressing brain slices with the deep-red calcium reporter CaSiR-1, we were able to optically image neuronal activity stimulated up to 20 Hz without crosstalk at 100 frames s−1. (a) A set of CaSiR-1 fluorescence imaging traces recorded from a single cell (c) in single trials. The horizontal red lines represent imaging epochs during which the red LED illumination power density was 1.85 mW mm−2. Vertical blue lines indicate the timing of 3 ms blue LED flashes incident on the CaSiR-1 loaded, Chronos-expressing neurons. Each blue light flash had a power density of 0.063 mW mm−2. (b) A zoomed-in window showing the CaSiR-1 imaging trial whilst photostimulating the brain slice with blue light at 20 Hz. We observed distinct calcium responses for each blue LED light flash. Imaging data were acquired at 100 Hz frame rates. Video of the calcium response is included in the supplementary information. (c) An image showing the cell and ROI (white circle) over which the traces in (a) were averaged. The frame was taken at the peak of fluorescence response of the cell following a blue light flash.