2 research outputs found
A Rationally Designed, General Strategy for Membrane Orientation of Photoinduced Electron Transfer-Based Voltage-Sensitive Dyes
Voltage
imaging with fluorescent dyes offers promise for interrogating
the complex roles of membrane potential in coordinating the activity
of neurons in the brain. Yet, low sensitivity often limits the broad
applicability of optical voltage indicators. In this paper, we use
molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to guide the design of new, ultrasensitive
fluorescent voltage indicators that use photoinduced electron transfer
(PeT) as a voltage-sensing switch. MD simulations predict an approximately
16% increase in voltage sensitivity resulting purely from improved
alignment of dye with the membrane. We confirm this theoretical finding
by synthesizing 9 new voltage-sensitive (VoltageFluor, or VF) dyes
and establishing that all of them display the expected improvement
of approximately 19%. This synergistic outworking of theory and experiment
enabled computational and theoretical estimation of VF dye orientation
in lipid bilayers and has yielded the most sensitive PeT-based VF
dye to date. We use this new voltage indicator to monitor voltage
spikes in neurons from rat hippocampus and human pluripotent-stem-cell-derived
dopaminergic neurons
A Rationally Designed, General Strategy for Membrane Orientation of Photoinduced Electron Transfer-Based Voltage-Sensitive Dyes
Voltage
imaging with fluorescent dyes offers promise for interrogating
the complex roles of membrane potential in coordinating the activity
of neurons in the brain. Yet, low sensitivity often limits the broad
applicability of optical voltage indicators. In this paper, we use
molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to guide the design of new, ultrasensitive
fluorescent voltage indicators that use photoinduced electron transfer
(PeT) as a voltage-sensing switch. MD simulations predict an approximately
16% increase in voltage sensitivity resulting purely from improved
alignment of dye with the membrane. We confirm this theoretical finding
by synthesizing 9 new voltage-sensitive (VoltageFluor, or VF) dyes
and establishing that all of them display the expected improvement
of approximately 19%. This synergistic outworking of theory and experiment
enabled computational and theoretical estimation of VF dye orientation
in lipid bilayers and has yielded the most sensitive PeT-based VF
dye to date. We use this new voltage indicator to monitor voltage
spikes in neurons from rat hippocampus and human pluripotent-stem-cell-derived
dopaminergic neurons