Targeting light-gated chloride channels to neuronal somatodendritic domain reduces their excitatory effect in the axon
Posted on: 22 July 2018
Preprint posted on 25 May 2018
Article now published in eLife at http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/elife.38506
High-efficiency optogenetic silencing with soma-targeted anion-conducting channelrhodopsins
Posted on:
Preprint posted on 8 December 2017
Article now published in Nature Communications at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06511-8
Advanced soma-targeting of light-gated chloride channels delivers the most potent inhibitory optogenetic control to date.
Selected by Mahesh KarnaniCategories: cell biology, molecular biology, neuroscience, physiology
Summary
Recent advances have enhanced optogenetic inhibition by targeting a powerful light-gated chloride channel mostly to the somatodendritic compartment of neurons.
Context
Optogenetics, i.e., the use of light controlled membrane proteins to manipulate electrical activity of neurons, is a decisive technique in circuit neuroscience and beyond. Particularly the millisecond precision and cell specificity of this perturbation method enable profound advances in circuit studies. Neuronal activation is achieved routinely with channelrhodopsin variants to suit the illumination wavelength and speed required. However, neuronal inhibition with optogenetics is less trivial1. This is fundamentally due to the different transmembrane driving forces of ions available for inhibition compared to those for depolarisation. Reversal potentials of inhibiting anion channel currents are more varied and closer to a typical resting membrane potential than the reversal potentials of depolarising cation channel currents. This causes problems for inhibition. One problem is that chloride channels are commonly excitatory at axon terminals while being inhibitory in somatodendritic domains of mature neurons. In contrast, cation channels like channelrhodopsin will depolarise and elicit action potentials regardless of subcellular compartment. Besides channels, ionic pumps may be used to manipulate the membrane potential. This has been a useful strategy for optogenetic inhibition, and experimenters have greatly benefited from the light activated inward chloride pump halorhodopsin, and the outward proton pump archeorhodopsin. These come with some disadvantages though – the hyperpolarising current achieved with pumps is less effective at inhibition than inhibitory ion channels, and archeorhodopsin has an unforeseen side-effect of exciting some axons due to calcium influx triggered by increased intracellular pH2. For these reasons, the high conductance anion channelrhodopsin GtACR2 is a promising advance in optogenetic inhibition, if its expression can be excluded from axons where it would be excitatory.
Key findings
These preprints show that GtACR2 is excitatory in axons, in complementary sets of experiments mostly in cultured neurons and in vivo (Mahn et al.), and in brain slices with pharmacological manipulations (Messier et al.). Both preprints demonstrate light activated postsynaptic currents in neurons that are innervated by GtACR2 bearing fibers. Messier and colleagues went on to show these currents were sensitive to synaptic blockers and were abolished by action potential blockade with tetrodotoxin. The currents reappeared when 4-aminopyridine and tetraethylammonium were added on top of tetrodotoxin to prolong membrane depolarisation – a tell-tale sign of direct depolarisation of presynaptic terminals (see Figure). Both studies also observed antidromic (initiated in the axon) spikes during light induced hyperpolarisation in the somata of GtACR2 bearing cells, in line with axonal depolarisation.
Besides GtACR2 and its variant GtACR1, two other light-gated chloride channels, iC++ and iChloC, performed similarly, though GtACR2 was more powerful. This is why both studies selected GtACR2 for a further modification that targets it to the somato-dendritic compartment. Mahn and colleagues fused GtACR2 to the Kv2.1 C-terminal segment (Kv2.1C), a strategy that has been used in two recent publications3,4. Messier and colleagues screened eight different soma-targeting motifs, including Kv2.1C, and found greatest somatodendritic specificity with a hybrid targeting motif Kv2.1C-linker-TlcnC. Both studies found several-fold increased somatic inhibitory current and decreased axonal activation with their soma-targeting constructs.
Why I chose these preprints
I am a believer in the transformative power of optogenetics, but sometimes I note more seasoned researchers ‘stroking their beards’ tentatively when these beliefs are laid bare. I think this is because optogenetics is a relatively young technique and as such we are still unclear of all the caveats. The ambiguity of effects of inhibitory opsins has prompted a few studies before these preprints5,2. On the other hand, we might question how physiologically relevant it is to use excitatory opsins to activate a population of neurons at millisecond synchrony out of the blue from the circuit’s perspective. Might it be more normative for a circuit to gradually ramp up its activity and find its own resonant frequency than to receive a constant frequency pulse train? Is it relevant to average across repeated trials given that there are likely plasticity effects from such a powerful activation?
Another reason these studies are crucial is that targeting opsins exclusively to somata is the way forward for true single-cell resolution optical control3,4,6,7. It is clear from many studies that off-target activation of the neuropil structures (i.e., dendrites and axons) adjacent to somata is a caveat for single cell manipulation even with state-of-the-art optical systems. Sparse, soma-specific expression offers a solution.
What next?
These studies honestly and constructively address the challenges inherent in optogenetic inhibition. The authors have made considerable progress toward reliable optogenetic inhibition by targetting the opsin to somatodendritic domain. The achieved soma-specific expression is not total in either case however. Higher soma-specificity would be highly welcome, but how could this be achieved? Messier and colleagues mention engineering inward rectification to the chloride channel, seeking better soma-targeting motifs or simply reducing overall expression level of the current mostly soma-targeted protein such that the axonal activation would be minimal. One might imagine that for pyramidal neurons targeting opsin expression to the axon-initial-segment could yield further improvement. Another possibility may be some form of two-component strategy involving a soma-specific structure (nuclear membrane protein interacting with plasma-membrane?). On the other hand, just for reliable inhibition in general, a light-gated potassium channel might be optimal1, as the potassium equilibrium potential tends to remain hyperpolarised in axons.
References:
- Wiegert, J. S., Mahn, M., Prigge, M., Printz, Y. & Yizhar, O. Silencing Neurons: Tools, Applications, and Experimental Constraints. Neuron 95, 504–529 (2017).
- Mahn, M., Prigge, M., Ron, S., Levy, R. & Yizhar, O. Biophysical constraints of optogenetic inhibition at presynaptic terminals. Nat. Neurosci. 19, 554–556 (2016).
- Forli, A. et al. Two-Photon Bidirectional Control and Imaging of Neuronal Excitability with High Spatial Resolution In Vivo. Cell Rep. 22, 3087–3098 (2018).
- Mardinly, A. R. et al. Precise multimodal optical control of neural ensemble activity. Nat. Neurosci. 21, 881–893 (2018).
- El-Gaby, M. et al. Archaerhodopsin Selectively and Reversibly Silences Synaptic Transmission through Altered pH. Cell Rep. 16, 2259–2268 (2016).
- Shemesh, O. A. et al. Temporally precise single-cell-resolution optogenetics. Nat. Neurosci. 20, 1796–1806 (2017).
- Baker, C. A., Elyada, Y. M., Parra, A. & Bolton, M. M. Cellular resolution circuit mapping with temporal-focused excitation of soma-targeted channelrhodopsin. Elife 5, (2016).
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