| Literature DB >> 31514747 |
Yuki Bando1,2, Christiane Grimm1, Victor H Cornejo1, Rafael Yuste3.
Abstract
As a "holy grail" of neuroscience, optical imaging of membrane potential could enable high resolution measurements of spiking and synaptic activity in neuronal populations. This has been partly achieved using organic voltage-sensitive dyes in vitro, or in invertebrate preparations yet unspecific staining has prevented single-cell resolution measurements from mammalian preparations in vivo. The development of genetically encoded voltage indicators (GEVIs) and chemogenetic sensors has enabled targeting voltage indicators to plasma membranes and selective neuronal populations. Here, we review recent advances in the design and use of genetic voltage indicators and discuss advantages and disadvantages of three classes of them. Although genetic voltage indicators could revolutionize neuroscience, there are still significant challenges, particularly two-photon performance. To overcome them may require cross-disciplinary collaborations, team effort, and sustained support by large-scale research initiatives.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31514747 PMCID: PMC6739974 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-019-0682-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Historical overview of genetic voltage indicators. Sensors fall into three distinct families based on voltage sensing domains (VSD; left), microbial rhodopsins (middle), or chemogenetic probes (right) and are arranged chronologically according to year of first report. Color of the box refers to the activation wavelength reported in the paper or inferred from the spectrum of the fluorescent protein. Black stars denote reported two-photon measurements. Note that HAPI-Nile Red and Voltron are also rhodopsin-based. See text for references
Comparative performance of genetically targeted voltage indicators. Values extracted from the literature. NR not reported, RT room temperature
| λex [nm] | λem [nm] | Rise time (depol.) [ms] | Decay time (hyperpol.) [ms] | Intensity ~[W/cm2] | SNR | Res. spike rate [Hz] | ΔF/F for 100 mV | Bleaching | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| ArcLight Q239 | 480 | 520 | τ1 = 9 (50%) τ2 = 48 (RT) | τ1 = 17 (79%) τ2 = 63 (RT) | Xenon arc lamp | 3.7 per AP | 10 | −35% | τ = 244 s | Jin 2012 [ |
| ArcLight-MT | 480 | 535 | τ = 84.8 (RT) | τ = 91.9 (RT) | Mercury arc lamp | 5.6 per AP | 10 | −20% | τ = 360 s | Kwon 2017 [ |
| ASAP1 | 472 | 525 | τ1 = 2.1 (60%) τ2 = 71.5 (RT) | τ1 = 2.0 (43.7%) τ2 = 50.8 (RT) | 10− 1 | 14.6 per AP | 200 | − 20% | τ = 35 m | St-Pierre 2014 [ |
| ASAP2f | 470 | 525 | τ1 = 2.8 (81%) τ2 = 135 (RT) | τ1 = 2.4 (71%) τ2 = 155 (RT) | 100 | 5 per AP | 100 | −20% | τ = 404 s | Yang 2016 [ |
| ASAP2s | 480 | 525 | τ1 = 5.2 (56%) τ2 = 63 (RT) | τ1 = 24 (49%) τ2 = 106 (RT) | 100 | 8 per AP | 100 | −38% | τ1 = 121 s (69%) τ2 = 1017 s | Chamberland 2017 [ |
| ASAP3 | 484 | 525 | τ1 = 3.7 (81%) τ2 = 48 (RT) | τ1 = 16 (81%) τ2 = 102 (RT) | 10−1 | 2.6 per AP (2P) | 100 | −50% | 19.6%/first 10 s 0.99%/m after that (2P) | Chavarha 2018 [ |
| Bongwoori | 472 | 496 | τ1 = 8 (91%) τ2 = 30 (RT) | τ = 7 (RT) | Xenon arc lamp | 19 per AP | 60 | −15% | > 450 s | Piao 2015 [ |
| Bongwoori-R3 | 472 | 497 | τ1 = 7 (90%) τ2 = 45 (RT) | τ1 = 6 (91%) τ2 = 46 (RT) | Xenon arc lamp | 52 per AP | 65 | −20% | > 450 s | Lee 2017 [ |
| FlicR1 | 561 | 595 | τ1 = 3 (90%) τ2 = 42 (RT) | τ1 = 2.8 (70%) τ2 = 18 (RT) | 101 | 6 per AP | 100 | 6.40% | τ = 150 s | Abdelfattah 2016 [ |
| FlicR2 | 561 | 630 | τ1 = 2.9 τ2 = 29.5 (RT) | τ1 = 3.1 τ2 = 28.5 (RT) | 100 | NR | NR | 12.90% | NR | Kannan 2018 [ |
| Marina | 488 | 520 | τ = 29.2 (RT) | τ1 = 15.6 (61%) τ2 = 59.4 (RT) | 100 | 4.5 per AP | NR | 29.20% | τ = 206 s | Platisa 2017 [ |
| Mermaid | 455 | 480 (donor) 575 (acceptor) | τ1~ 12 τ2~200 (RT) | τ~ 128 (RT) | 100 | NR | 100 | ~ 30% | NR | Tsutsui 2008 [ |
| VSFP Butterfly1.2 | 483 | 542 (donor) 594 (acceptor) | τ1~1.5 (35%) τ2~15 (RT) | NR | Xenon arc lamp | NR | 40 | 5% | NR | Akemann 2012 [ |
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| Arch | 640 | 687 | < 1 | < 1 | 103 | NR | NR | 40% at 640 nm | NR | Kralj 2012 [ |
| Arch (D95N) | 640 | 687 | τ1 = 0.5 (20%) τ2 = 41 (RT) | NR | 103 | NR | NR | 50% at 640 nm | NR | Kralj 2012 [ |
| Archer1 | 655 | NR | Like Arch | Like Arch | 102 | NR | 40 | 85% at 655 nm | NR | Flytzanis 2014 [ |
| QuasAr1 | 640 | 715 | τ1 = 0.05 (94%) τ2 = 3.2 (RT) | Similar to rising | 102 | 20–30 per AP | NR | 32% at 640 nm | τ = 440 s | Hochbaum 2014 [ |
| QuasAr2 | 640 | 715 | τ1 = 1.2 (68%) τ2 = 11.8 (RT) | Similar to rising | 102 | 40–70 per AP | NR | 90% at 640 nm | τ = 1020 s | Hochbaum 2014 [ |
| QuasAr3 | Like QuasAr2 | Like QuasAr2 | τ1 = 1.2 (77%) τ2 = 10.0 (34 °C) | τ1 = 0.9 (91%) τ2 = 9.0 (34 °C) | 102 | 27 per AP | NR | 54% at 640 nm | NR | Adam 2018 [ |
| Archon1 | 637 | NR | τ1 = 0.6 (88%) τ2 = 8.1 (34 °C) | τ1 = 1.1 (88%) τ2 = 13 (34 °C) | 101–102 | 21 per AP | NR | 43% at 637 nm | 0.01%/s | Piatkevich 2018 [ |
| Archon2 | 637 | NR | τ1 = 0.6 (70%) τ2 = 6.7 (34 °C) | τ1 = 0.17 (92%) τ2 = 7.0 (34 °C) | 101–102 | 16 per AP | 200 | 19% at 637 nm | 0.03%/s | Piatkevich 2018 [ |
| QuasAr2-mOrange | 549 | 565 | τ1 = 3.9 (60%) τ2 = 27 (23 °C) | τ1 = 4.3 (45%) τ2 = 26 (23 °C) | 101 | 9 per AP | NR | −10% | NR | Zou 2014 [ |
| MacQ-mCitrine | 515 | 530 | τ1 = 2.8 (74%) τ2 = 71 (RT) | τ1 = 5.4 (77%) τ2 = 67 (RT) | 101 | NR | NR | −20% | 1.3%/s | Gong 2014 [ |
| Ace2-4aa-mNeon | 505 | 515 | τ1 = 0.37 (58%) τ2 = 5.5 (RT) | τ1 = 0.5 (60%) τ2 = 5.9 (RT) | 101 | NR | NR | −12% | 0.6%/s | Gong 2015 [ |
| VARNAM | 558 | 605 | τ1 = 0.88 τ2 = 5.2 (RT) | τ1 = 0.80 τ2 = 4.7 (RT) | 101 | 36 per AP | 100 | −14% for 120 mV | τ = 256 s | Kannan 2018 [ |
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| hVOS | 480 | 535 | < 1 | < 1 | Mercury arc lamp | NR | 667 | 34% | NR | Chanda et al. 2005 [ |
| Flare1 | 488 | 570 | τ1 = 0.92 (96%) τ2 = 23.5 | τ1 = 1.41 (91%) τ2 = 25.6 | 100 | 53 | 20 | 35.9% | NR | Xu et al. 2018 [ |
| Voltron 525 | 532 | 553 | τ1 = 0.64 (61%) τ2 = 4.1 | τ1 = 0.78 (55%) τ2 = 3.9 | 100 | 4.4 | 10 | 30% | τ = 206 s | Abdelfattah 2016 [ |
| VF-EX | 525 | 540 | < 1 | < 1 | NR | 20 | 3 | 21% | NR | Liu et al. 2017 [ |
| VoltageSpy | 525 | 540 | < 1 | < 1 | 10−1–100 | 7.7 | NR | 60% | NR | Grenier et al. 2019 [ |
| HAPI-Nile | 540–552 | 581 | τ1 = 1.9 (85%) | τ1 = 1.9 (85%) | 101 | 12.4 | 10 | 5.50% | NR | Sundukova et al. 2019 [ |
Fig. 2Recent VSD-based GEVIs. a Schematic drawing of two configurations of VSD-based GEVIs. Left: VSD fusion with intracellular fluorescent protein (FP). Right: VSD insertion with extracellular circularly permuted FP. b Left: Expression of FlicR1, a red-shifted indicator with flipped polarity, in dissociated hippocampal neuron. Right: optical (red) and electrical (black) responses to action potentials at 5 Hz, recorded with one-photon imaging. Modified with permission from [43]. c Left: Expression of Marina, a green indicator with flipped polarity in cultured hippocampal neurons. Right: Spontaneous spiking activity in a cortical neuron from an acute brain slice recorded with one-photon imaging. Modified from [44] with permission
Fig. 3Recent rhodopsin-based GEVIs. a Representation of two kinds of rhodopsin-based GEVIs with PROPS type GEVI (left) and eFRET-based GEVI (right). b Left: Confocal images of QuasAr3 expression in brain slices; bar 50 μm. Middle: Patch-clamp recordings (black) with corresponding fluorescence traces (red) in acute brain slices. Right: overlay of electrical and optical signal for a single AP. Modified with permission from [55]. c Left: Expression of Archon1 in acute brain slices; bar 25 μm. Middle: Archon1 fluorescence (pink; single trial) and related electrical traces (black) in cultured cells with overlay of both signals for the AP indicated by the arrow. Right: Fluorescence changes (single trial) of Archon 1 following action potential-like voltage changes (black) of 200 Hz in a voltage-clamped neuron in culture. Modified with permission from [57]. d Left: Confocal image of VARNAM expression in pyramidal neurons in fixed postnatal brain slices. Middle: Concurrent optical (red) and electrical recordings (black) evoked by 10 Hz (left) and 50 Hz (right) current injections with overlay of both signals for indicated AP. Right: Changes in membrane potential driven by activation of the channelrhodopsin Cheriff (blue) monitored electrically (black) and optically (red). Modified with permission from [44]
Fig. 4Chemogenetic voltage indicators. a Schematic representation of hVOS, consisting of a fluorescent protein anchored to the plasma membrane, combined with a non-fluorescent synthetic compound dipicrylamine (DPA), which serves as a voltage-sensitive FRET acceptor. b Cellular resolution voltage imaging with hVOS. Hippocampal slices from hVOS::Fos mouse expressing hVOS probe in granule cells in a Cre-Fos-dependent manner. Left: Fluorescence in brain sections after crossing Ai35-hVOS with Cre-Fos mice showing hVOS-expressing neurons in the granule cell layer of the hippocampus. Right: Response in four neurons in a hippocampal slice from an hVOS::Fos mouse to electrical stimulation. c Schematic representation of VoltageSpy, consisting of the expression of SpyCatcher on the cellular surface and the subsequent extracellular interaction with the VF dye. d Subcellular voltage imaging with VoltageSpy. Cultured hippocampal neurons co-expressing SpyCatcher and nuclear mCherry and labeled with VoltageSpy were captured at 500 Hz under widefield fluorescence microscopy. Left: VoltageSpy is shown in green and nuclear staining in red. Middle: Higher magnifications of selected dendritic regions. Scale bar 20 μm. Right: Voltage imaging in dendrites showing evoked action potentials in selected ROIs, coded by colors indicated in the panel. Images and traces modified with permission from [69] (b) and [82] (d)
Standards for testing genetic voltage indicators
| Direct comparison between different types or families of voltage sensors is difficult in many cases because of a lack of accepted standardized guidelines for the measurement of parameters (see [ |
| (1) Basic measurement parameters, using a light source (halogen lamps, LEDs, one or two photon lasers), power measurements (irradiance, in W/cm2) and signal to noise ratio (SNR). Fluorescence changes upon physiological voltage steps, and rise and decay times are also necessary, since they reflect speed and sensitivity of detection. Additionally, optimal absorption/emission spectra for fluorophores and range of light intensity used for testing should be reported. |
| (2) Photostability is a general benchmark for fluorophores and could determine the temporal range of an experimental design. Measurement of the fluorescence half-life should be included in the same range of light intensities tested. |
| (3) ∆F/F responses to spontaneous and triggered action potentials (up to 100 Hz) should be reported to predict voltage sensor behavior for measurement of neuronal activity. |
| (4) As the vast majority of proteins do not have a unique localization in the cellular membrane, providing a detailed description of subcellular localization could help researchers to choose properly and consider any later image analysis for discarding signals from intracellular compartments. For neurons, targeting voltage sensors to somatic, dendritic, or axonal domains is also highly desired and should be highlighted |