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An engineered channelrhodopsin optimized for axon terminal activation and circuit mapping

Medicine and Health

An engineered channelrhodopsin optimized for axon terminal activation and circuit mapping

S. Hamada, M. Nagase, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Shun Hamada and colleagues unveils a novel ChR2 variant engineered to target presynaptic axon terminals, enhancing optogenetic manipulation of neural circuits. The innovative mGluR2-PA tag significantly improves accuracy in circuit mapping, enabling effective transmitter release with minimal photostimulation. Discover how this advancement could transform neural circuit research!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Optogenetic tools such as channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) enable the manipulation and mapping of neural circuits. However, ChR2 variants selectively transported down a neuron’s long-range axonal projections for precise presynaptic activation remain lacking. As a result, ChR2 activation is often contaminated by the spurious activation of en passant fibers that compromise the accurate interpretation of functional effects. Here, we explored the engineering of a ChR2 variant specifically localized to presynaptic axon terminals. The metabotropic glutamate receptor 2 (mGluR2) C-terminal domain fused with a proteolytic motif and axon-targeting signal (mGluR2-PA tag) localized ChR2-YFP at axon terminals without disturbing normal transport scenarios. mGluR2-PA-tagged ChR2 evoked transmitter release in distal projection areas enabling lower levels of photostimulation. Circuit connectivity mapping in vivo with the Spike Collision Test revealed that mGluR2-PA-tagged ChR2 is useful for identifying axonal projection with significant reduction in the polysynaptic excess noise. These results suggest that the mGluR2-PA tag helps accurate trafficking to the axon terminal, thereby providing abundant possibilities for optogenetic experiments.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Apr 12, 2021
Authors
Shun Hamada, Masashi Nagase, Tomohiko Yoshizawa, Akari Hagiwara, Yoshikazu Isomura, Ayako M. Watabe, Toshihisa Ohtsuka
Tags
channelrhodopsin
optogenetics
neural circuits
axon terminals
mGluR2-PA tag
circuit mapping
transmitter release
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