10 research outputs found

    Engineering and Characterization of an Enhanced Fluorescent Protein Voltage Sensor

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    BACKGROUND: Fluorescent proteins have been used to generate a variety of biosensors to optically monitor biological phenomena in living cells. Among this class of genetically encoded biosensors, reporters for membrane potential have been a particular challenge. The use of presently known voltage sensor proteins is limited by incorrect subcellular localization and small or absent voltage responses in mammalian cells. RESULTS: Here we report on a fluorescent protein voltage sensor with superior targeting to the mammalian plasma membrane and high responsiveness to membrane potential signaling in excitable cells. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: This biosensor, which we termed VSFP2.1, is likely to lead to new methods of monitoring electrically active cells with cell type specificity, non-invasively and in large numbers, simultaneously

    Selective Gene Expression by Postnatal Electroporation during Olfactory Interneuron Neurogenesis

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    Neurogenesis persists in the olfactory system throughout life. The mechanisms of how new neurons are generated, how they integrate into circuits, and their role in coding remain mysteries. Here we report a technique that will greatly facilitate research into these questions. We found that electroporation can be used to robustly and selectively label progenitors in the Subventicular Zone. The approach was performed postnatally, without surgery, and with near 100% success rates. Labeling was found in all classes of interneurons in the olfactory bulb, persisted to adulthood and had no adverse effects. The broad utility of electroporation was demonstrated by encoding a calcium sensor and markers of intracellular organelles. The approach was found to be effective in wildtype and transgenic mice as well as rats. Given its versatility, robustness, and both time and cost effectiveness, this method offers a powerful new way to use genetic manipulation to understand adult neurogenesis

    Fluorescence-Based Monitoring of In Vivo Neural Activity Using a Circuit-Tracing Pseudorabies Virus

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    The study of coordinated activity in neuronal circuits has been challenging without a method to simultaneously report activity and connectivity. Here we present the first use of pseudorabies virus (PRV), which spreads through synaptically connected neurons, to express a fluorescent calcium indicator protein and monitor neuronal activity in a living animal. Fluorescence signals were proportional to action potential number and could reliably detect single action potentials in vitro. With two-photon imaging in vivo, we observed both spontaneous and stimulated activity in neurons of infected murine peripheral autonomic submandibular ganglia (SMG). We optically recorded the SMG response in the salivary circuit to direct electrical stimulation of the presynaptic axons and to physiologically relevant sensory stimulation of the oral cavity. During a time window of 48 hours after inoculation, few spontaneous transients occurred. By 72 hours, we identified more frequent and prolonged spontaneous calcium transients, suggestive of neuronal or tissue responses to infection that influence calcium signaling. Our work establishes in vivo investigation of physiological neuronal circuit activity and subsequent effects of infection with single cell resolution

    Generation of a Homozygous Transgenic Rat Strain Stably Expressing a Calcium Sensor Protein for Direct Examination of Calcium Signaling

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    In drug discovery, prediction of selectivity and toxicity require the evaluation of cellular calcium homeostasis. The rat is a preferred laboratory animal for pharmacology and toxicology studies, while currently no calcium indicator protein expressing rat model is available. We established a transgenic rat strain stably expressing the GCaMP2 fluorescent calcium sensor by a transposon-based methodology. Zygotes were co-injected with mRNA of transposase and a CAG- GCaMP2 expressing construct, and animals with one transgene copy were pre-selected by measuring fluorescence in blood cells. A homozygous rat strain was generated with high sensor protein expression in the heart, kidney, liver, and blood cells. No pathological alterations were found in these animals, and fluorescence measurements in cardiac tissue slices and primary cultures demonstrated the applicability of this system for studying calcium signaling. We show here that the GCaMP2 expressing rat cardiomyocytes allow the prediction of cardiotoxic drug side-effects, and provide evidence for the role of Na+/Ca2+ exchanger and its beneficial pharmacological modulation in cardiac reperfusion. Our data indicate that drug-induced alterations and pathological processes can be followed by using this rat model, suggesting that transgenic rats expressing a calcium-sensitive protein provide a valuable system for pharmacological and toxicological studies

    Optical Imaging as a Link Between Cellular Neurophysiology and Circuit Modeling

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    The relatively simple and highly modular circuitry of the cerebellum raised expectations decades ago that a realistic computational model of cerebellar circuit operations would be feasible, and prove insightful for unraveling cerebellar information processing. To this end, the biophysical properties of most cerebellar cell types and their synaptic connections have been well characterized and integrated into realistic single cell models. Furthermore, large scale models of cerebellar circuits that extrapolate from single cell properties to circuit dynamics have been constructed. While the development of single cell models have been constrained by microelectrode recordings, guidance and validation as these models are scaled up to study network interactions requires an experimental methodology capable of monitoring cerebellar dynamics at the population level. Here we review the potential of optical imaging techniques to serve this purpose

    J Neurosci

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    Nonvisual photosensation enables animals to sense light without sight. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of nonvisual photobehaviors are poorly understood, especially in vertebrate animals. Here, we describe the photomotor response (PMR), a robust and reproducible series of motor behaviors in zebrafish that is elicited by visual wavelengths of light but does not require the eyes, pineal gland, or other canonical deep-brain photoreceptive organs. Unlike the relatively slow effects of canonical nonvisual pathways, motor circuits are strongly and quickly (seconds) recruited during the PMR behavior. We find that the hindbrain is both necessary and sufficient to drive these behaviors. Using in vivo calcium imaging, we identify a discrete set of neurons within the hindbrain whose responses to light mirror the PMR behavior. Pharmacological inhibition of the visual cycle blocks PMR behaviors, suggesting that opsin-based photoreceptors control this behavior. These data represent the first known light-sensing circuit in the vertebrate hindbrain.DP1 NS082121/DP/NCCDPHP CDC HHS/United StatesDP1 NS082121/NS/NINDS NIH HHS/United StatesK01 MH091449/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesK01MH091449/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesR01 CA140188/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United StatesR01 DA030304/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United StatesR01 MH086867/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesR01DA030304/DA/NIDA NIH HHS/United StatesR01MH086867/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesR21 MH085205/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesR21MH085205/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesT32 MH020017/MH/NIMH NIH HHS/United StatesWellcome Trust/United Kingdom2013-08-28T00:00:00

    High frequency field potentials of the cerebellar cortex

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    The cerebellum plays a crucial role in motor coordination along with basal ganglia and the motor areas of the cerebral cortex. Both somatosensory and the cerebro-cerebral pathways bring in massive amounts of neural information to the cerebellum. The output of the cerebellar cortex projects to various motor cortices as well as down to the spinal cord to make its contributions to the motor function. The origin and function of the field potential oscillations in the cerebellum, especially in the high frequencies, have not been explored sufficiently. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the spatio-temporal characteristics of high frequency field potentials (150-350Hz) in the cerebellar cortex in a behavioral context. To this end, the paramedian lobule in rats was recorded using micro electro-corticogram (µ-ECoG) electrode arrays while the animal performed a lever press task using the forelimb. The phase synchrony analysis shows that the high frequency oscillations recorded at multiple points across the paramedian cortex episodically synchronize immediately before and desynchronize during the lever press. The electrode contacts were grouped according to their temporal course of phase synchrony around the time of lever press. Contact groups presented patches with slightly stronger synchrony values in the medio-lateral direction, and did not appear to form parasagittal zones. Spatiotemporal synchrony of high frequency field potentials has not been reported at such large-scales previously in the cerebellar cortex

    Optical analysis of synaptic plasticity in rat hippocampus

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    Long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 region of the hippocampus is dependent on NMDA receptor activation. Downstream of NMDA receptor signaling, the activation of α-calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (αCaMKII) is both necessary and sufficient for the induction of this form of LTP. It has been shown that αCaMKII accumulates in spines after glutamate application or ‘chemical LTP’. This postsynaptic accumulation of αCaMKII could be a key step for the induction of LTP, because it localizes the activated kinase close to the substrates of synaptic potentiation. It is not clear, however, what the threshold, time course of αCaMKII translocation are, and whether it is specific to the stimulated synapses only. To address these three questions, I combined optical stimulation techniques (Channelrhodopsin-2 stimulation and two-photon glutamate uncaging) with optical measurements of calcium transients and αCaMKII concentration. This ‘all-optical’ approach made it possible to investigate synapse-specific changes during the induction of LTP. I could show that coincident activity of pre- and postsynaptic cells was needed to trigger the translocation of αCaMKII. Functional potentiation could be measured immediately after stimulation, whereas αCaMKII accumulation reached its peak ~10 min later. This points to an additional structural role of αCaMKII at the postsynaptic density. Both αCaMKII fractions, the cytoplasmic fraction and postsynaptic bound αCaMKII, increased after optical LTP induction. These changes were restricted to stimulated spines. In spines that showed a persistent volume increase, the amount of bound αCaMKII was increased by a factor of two after 30-40 minutes. A second very interesting finding was the close correlation between spine volume changes and LTP, in terms of the time course, induction threshold and specificity. The optical LTP protocol led to a lasting volume increase only in the stimulated spines, but not in directly neighboring spines on the same dendrite. Spine volume reached its maximum immediately after stimulation. Since my all-optical approach relied heavily on the use of a newly identified light-gated cation channel (Channelrhodopsin-2, ChR2), I finally also characterized light activation of ChR2 in hippocampal pyramidal cells in detail. Neuronal activity could be controlled by blue light with millisecond precision. No direct activation of ChR2 was observed by two-photon imaging lasers, making it possible to combine the ChR2 stimulation technique with two-photon imaging. This led to a third important finding: the release probability of ChR2-expressing axonal terminals was increased if the action potential was induced by light. As a result, pairing of light stimulation with postsynaptic depolarization induced reliable long-term potentiation at CA1 synapses. In summary, the new all-optical approach that combines ChR2 stimulation, two-photon glutamate uncaging, and optical measurements of calcium transients and protein concentration, provides a new avenue for investigating plasticity at the level of single synapses. The induction of LTP in single synapses revealed that accumulation of αCaMKII is input specific thus validating Hebb’s postulate on a micrometer scale

    Functional investigation of neural circuits in larval zebrafish

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