Abstract
Ion pumps and channels are responsible for a wide variety of biological functions. Ion pumps transport only one ion during each stimulus-dependent reaction cycle, whereas ion channels conduct a large number of ions during each cycle. Ion pumping rhodopsins such as archaerhodopsin-3 (Arch) are often utilized as light-dependent neural silencers in animals, but they require a high-density light illumination of around 1 mW/mm2. Recently, anion channelrhodopsins -1 and -2 (GtACR1 and GtACR2) were discovered as light-gated anion channels from the cryptophyte algae Guillardia theta. GtACRs are therefore expected to silence neural activity much more efficiently than Arch. In this study, we successfully expressed GtACRs in neurons of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) and quantitatively evaluated how potently GtACRs can silence neurons in freely moving C. elegans. The results showed that the light intensity required for GtACRs to cause locomotion paralysis was around 1 µW/mm2, which is three orders of magnitude smaller than the light intensity required for Arch. As attractive features, GtACRs are less harmfulness to worms and allow stable neural silencing effects under long-term illumination. Our findings thus demonstrate that GtACRs possess a hypersensitive neural silencing activity in C. elegans and are promising tools for long-term neural silencing.
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Introduction
In environments on the earth, there are a variety of ions and organisms have ion transporters on their cell membranes that transport ions such as H+, Na+, K+ and Cl−. Ion transporters are roughly divided into two types: (i) ion pumps that actively transport ions across the membrane against ion concentration gradient, and (ii) ion channels that conduct ions across the membrane according to the ion concentration gradient1. The exchange of ions between the exterior and interior of cells is achieved by the function of pumps and channels, which lead to the production and dissipation of membrane potentials in living organisms1. The membrane potential plays crucial roles in the control of biological activities. For instance, an H+ pump in mitochondria produces an H+ gradient across the cell membrane that is necessary for the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)2, while the influx of Na+ into a cell by a Na+ channel triggers the action potential required for cell-to-cell communication, especially neurotransmission3.
Rhodopsins are photoreceptor proteins that possess a chromophore retinal (vitamin-A aldehyde) inside a seven-transmembrane α-helical apoprotein, opsin4, in which the retinal forms a Schiff base linkage with a conserved Lys residue (Fig. 1). Rhodopsins are roughly classified into two groups, microbial rhodopsins (type-1) and animal rhodopsins (type-2). Recently, a novel group named heliorhodopsins was identified by Béjà and coworkers5, although their biological function is still unclear. Type-1 microbial rhodopsins are widely distributed in a variety of microorganisms including archaea, bacteria and eukaryotes (i.e., fungi and algae)6. The photoabsorption of type-1 microbial rhodopsins triggers the trans-cis photoisomerization of the retinal chromophore, and then, through various distinct photointermediates, it thermally returns to the initial state4. During this sequential photoreaction called the photocycle, the opsin structurally changes, leading to various biological functions such as ion transport and light sensing7,8,9. When ion pumping and ion channeling microbial rhodopsins are expressed in cells, the production and dissipation of membrane potentials can be artificially regulated by light.
The method named optogenetics enables the manipulation of neural activity with a high spatiotemporal resolution and has been successfully applied to living animals including mice, zebrafish and the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans)9,10,11,12,13,14. The neural inhibition can be evoked through hyperpolarization of the membrane potential and light-driven outward proton pumping rhodopsins such as archaerhodopsin-3 (Arch) and thermophilic rhodopsin (TR) have been used for neural inhibition in animals14,15,16. A light-driven inward chloride pumping rhodopsin, Natronomonas pharaonis halorhodopsin (NpHR), can be also applied for neural inhibition17. However, unlike ion channeling rhodopsins such as light-gated cation channelrhodopsins (CCRs)9, ion pumping rhodopsins transport only one ion during each photocycle, which intrinsically limits the number of transportable ions, resulting in a poor efficiency of the hyperpolarization response (Fig. 1). In addition, the movement of a proton (H+) across the cell membrane by Arch decreases the extracellular pH, and therefore undesired secondary effects can be induced (Fig. 1). In 2015, light-gated anion channelrhodopsins -1 and -2 (GtACR1 and GtACR2) were discovered in the cryptophyte algae Guillardia theta18. From electrophysiological analysis of mammalian cells in culture, it has been reported that GtACRs selectively conduct monovalent anions such as Cl− and generate much larger photocurrents (approx. 1000-fold) than those of Arch18. Such the excellent light sensitivity of GtACRs has been even more enhanced by soma-targeting in neurons of a mouse brain19. GtACRs are thus expected to be more favorable for “efficiently” silencing neural activities “without pH change” in living animals (Fig. 1). In fact, GtACRs have already been proven to function as efficient neural inhibitors in Drosophila20,21, larval zebrafish22, ferret23 and mouse19. In addition, very recently GtACRs were expressed in “muscle” cells of C. elegans to control the behavior24. Moreover, GtACRs were successfully applied into the neurons of C. elegans to elucidate the functions of motor neurons in neural circuits25,26.
We report here a quantitative in vivo demonstration of optical neural silencing of GtACRs in C. elegans and their applicability for long-term light illumination. Demonstrating the utility of GtACRs in C. elegans “neurons” is very fruitful for researchers because C. elegans is a suitable animal model for investigating the mechanism of neural circuits due to its following advantages: (i) a small transparent body, and (ii) a compact and well-characterized nervous system consisting of 302 neurons27. We generated transgenic worms expressing GtACR1 or GtACR2 in neurons and quantitatively examined how efficiently those GtACRs can control the behavior of freely moving C. elegans. The results demonstrate that the light intensity required for GtACRs (approx. 1 µW/mm2) to sufficiently cause locomotion paralysis was three orders of magnitude smaller than that required for Arch (approx. 1 mW/mm2). We also monitored the lifespan of C. elegans and the stable silencing effect on orexin neurons in the hypothalamus of mice under long-term illumination. These results prove that GtACRs can be a useful tool for optogenetics in terms of sensitivity, harmlessness and sustainability.
Results and Discussion
Functional expression of GtACR1 and GtACR2 in C. elegans neurons
To confirm the protein expression levels of GtACR1 and GtACR2 in C. elegans, the gene for green fluorescent protein (eGFP) was fused to the C-termini of GtACR1 and GtACR2 (Fig. S1). The eGFP-tagged GtACR1 (ACR1-eGFP), GtACR2 (ACR2-eGFP) and Arch (Arch-eGFP) were expressed in worms using the promoter of the F25B3.3 gene, which drives pan-neuronal expression. Fluorescence images of ACR1-eGFP (Fig. 2A), ACR2-eGFP (Fig. 2B) and Arch-eGFP (Fig. 2C) in C. elegans were obtained using a fluorescence microscope with appropriate excitation and emission wavelengths (460–480 nm and 495–540 nm, respectively). A fluorescence image of C. elegans lacking the rhodopsin gene was also captured to monitor autofluorescence (Fig. 2D). The green fluorescence signals in Fig. 2A–C were significantly stronger than the autofluorescence signal in Fig. 2D and were assigned based on the literature27 to be from the head ganglia (circles), ventral nerve cord (squares) and tail ganglia (triangles), indicating the successful expression of ACR1-eGFP, ACR2-eGFP and Arch-eGFP in neurons throughout the body. A linear relationship between the fluorescence intensity and the camera exposure time was ensured to correctly perform quantitative evaluation of the fluorescence signals from eGFP for GtACR1, GtACR2 and Arch (R = 0.99) (Fig. S2). Quantitation of the fluorescence signals (Fig. 2E) revealed that the estimated expression levels of GtACR1 and GtACR2 were approximately 6 and 10 times smaller than that of Arch, respectively. It can thus be concluded that the opsins for GtACRs were expressed in C. elegans neurons although the expression levels were significantly lower than the expression level of Arch. The low expression levels of GtACRs may be attributed to potential issues concerning transcription, folding and/or stability.
We next examined whether light illumination could affect the locomotion behavior of transgenic worms expressing GtACRs. Since the absorption maxima were reported to be 515 nm for GtACR118, 470 nm for GtACR218 and 552 nm for Arch28, neural silencing activity was monitored at wavelengths of 520 ± 10 nm for GtACR1, 460 ± 10 nm for GtACR2 and 545 ± 10 nm for Arch. Upon illumination, the locomotion of worms expressing GtACR1 or GtACR2 were paralyzed immediately, as previously reported for Arch14, and locomotion rapidly recovered to normal within 1.0 sec after turning off the light (Supplementary Video 1). In contrast, transgenic worms expressing GtACR1 or GtACR2 opsins without all-trans retinal (ATR), an essential cofactor for rhodopsin, showed no locomotion paralysis regardless of the presence of illumination (Supplementary Video 2). These results suggest that, in the presence of ATR, GtACR1 and GtACR2 are functionally expressed in C. elegans neurons and effectively silence motor neurons governing contraction and relaxation of body wall muscles as previously demonstrated for Arch14. Although it is unclear whether the worms possess endogenous retinal and/or its related compounds, even if they exist, the amount(s) must be insufficient for activation of GtACRs. Thus, these results proved that the paralysis elicited in the presence of ATR was indeed caused by GtACRs similar to the proton pump Arch.
Next, to further confirm whether these responses are attributable to GtACRs, we measured the fraction of paralyzed worms against the excitation light wavelengths (Fig. 3). Linear fittings could be performed with the plots when light intensities were below 12 × 10−4 mW/mm2 for GtACR1 and below 16 × 10−4 mW/mm2 for GtACR2 (Fig. S3), and therefore we employed these ranges of intensity for the measurements. The absorption spectra of purified GtACR1 and GtACR2 were obtained using HEK293T cells in culture and are shown in Fig. 3 for comparison. The absorption maxima were located at 515 nm and 480 nm for GtACR1 and GtACR2, respectively, and fit with the absorption spectra obtained by electrophysiological experiments in HEK293T cells as reported previously18, suggesting the successful purification of GtACRs from HEK293T cells. Of note, this is the first absorption spectrum for purified GtACR2. The fractions of paralyzed worms expressing GtACR1 and GtACR2 roughly matched with the cognate absorption spectra (Fig. 3). However, for GtACR1, the fraction of paralyzed worms showed the slight increase at around 460 nm in comparison with the absorption spectrum. The explanation for this could be that some photointermediate(s) such as an L intermediate is excited to directly return to original state upon the illumination at 460 nm and this shortened photocycle contributes to increase the fraction of paralyzed worms at 460 nm29. Similarly, for GtACR2, the absorption spectrum at less than 440 nm seems to be slightly larger than the fraction of paralyzed worms. We presume that this was caused by the impurity in GtACR2 protein purified from HEK293T cells. Importantly, the overall match between the fraction curves and the absorption spectra for both GtACR1 and GtACR2 indicates that GtACR1 and GtACR2 are functionally expressed in C. elegans neurons and work as an in vivo neural silencer.
Quantitative evaluation of the neural silencing activity of GtACRs
In order to quantitatively evaluate the neural silencing activities of GtACR1 and GtACR2 and to compare them with Arch, we measured the body length changes of worms with or without illumination. As shown in Fig. 4A, we defined the body length of each worm as the sum of the length of each line connecting adjacent dots placed at equal intervals along the midline of the body image of a worm, as reported previously30. To investigate body length changes, 5 successive light pulses of 1.0 sec duration and 1.0 Hz frequency were applied to each transgenic worm. As shown in Fig. 4B, in transgenic worms expressing GtACR1, GtACR2 or Arch, elongation of the body length was induced by approximately 5% immediately by the illumination. That elongation was likely to be mediated by the silencing of motor neurons governing muscular contraction16,30. After turning off the light, the body length rapidly recovered to the initial level within 1.0 sec. To quantitatively evaluate the response and recovery times, we calculated the slopes of the rising and falling curves for GtACR1, GtACR2 and Arch as represented by the bold lines. As seen in Fig. 4C, the normalized slope of body length change per sec for GtACR2 was comparable to that of Arch, suggesting that GtACR2 efficiently induces neural silencing in freely moving C. elegans. On the other hand, the normalized slope of body length change per sec for GtACR1 was significantly larger than that for Arch. Since the slope of body length change would reflect the time constant of photocurrents induced by rhodopsins, such the large slope for GtACR1 suggests the ability of the high temporal neural silencing for GtACR1.
To further examine the efficiency of GtACRs as a tool for neural silencing, we evaluated and compared the light intensity-dependence of neural silencing activities among GtACR1, GtACR2 and Arch. As shown in Fig. 5, the fraction of paralyzed worms increased as expected in a light intensity-dependent manner for GtACR1 with 520 nm light (closed diamonds), GtACR2 with 460 nm light (closed squares) and Arch with 545 nm light (closed circles). In contrast, worms without any rhodopsin showed no paralysis at all even with increased light intensity or different light wavelengths (460 nm; open squares, 520 nm; open diamonds, 545 nm; open circles). Lastly, we estimated the light intensity for 50% locomotion paralysis (EI50). The EI50 values for GtACR1, GtACR2 and Arch were estimated to be 5.3 × 10−4 mW/mm2, 15 × 10−4 mW/mm2 and 4.8 × 10−1 mW/mm2, respectively. Thus, GtACR1 and GtACR2 efficiently induced locomotion paralysis of the worms at a roughly 3 orders of magnitude lower light intensity compared with Arch. These results demonstrate that GtACRs have ultra-efficient neural silencing activities in C. elegans. The reason for such high activities is because GtACRs conduct large number of ions during photoreactions unlike Arch, resulting in drastic changes in the membrane potential. Of note, as shown in Fig. 2, the protein expression levels of GtACRs were 6 to 10-fold smaller than that for Arch in C. elegans. Assuming that the expression level is linearly correlated with the sensitivity for neural silencing, GtACRs would show 3,000 to 5,000-fold larger sensitivity than Arch. In addition, GtACR1 and GtACR2 would be useful as in vivo green and blue-light sensitive neural silencers because of the difference in absorption spectrum. Thus, instead of Arch, GtACRs would be next generation tools for in vivo optogenetics with high frequency and ultra-high sensitive neural silencing.
In vivo applicability of GtACRs under long-term illumination
As described above and as shown in Fig. 1, the proton pumping rhodopsin Arch causes an unfavorable enrichment of proton concentration (i.e., acidification) outside the cell. Assuming that an unfavorable proton enrichment induces undesired harmful effects on cells, especially under long-term illumination, we measured the lifespan of worms expressing Arch by observing their motility. Figure 6A shows that worms expressing Arch were completely dead within 30 h under green (545 ± 10 nm) light illumination, where the light intensity was adjusted to be 2.8 mW/mm2 to fully activate Arch (see Fig. 5). Although the survival rate of the worms starts changing after 12 h, there should have been already some influence on the neurons of worms even within 12 h. Indeed, it was observed that the body gradually got black and also the motility decreased within 12 h. Similar experiments were also performed for Arch opsin without ATR. Over more than 30 h, the worms survived and their body color and motility hardly changed. These results suggest that the proton transport by Arch causes the decreased lifespan of the worms. Although the physiological reason why the worms with Arch showed decreased lifespan is still unclear, we hypothesize that the extracellular pH change caused by Arch may induce apoptosis, a type of cell death, to neurons via activation of acid-sensing cation channels (ASICs). It has been reported that proton enrichment outside cells activates ASICs31. The activated ASICs conduct Ca2+ ions and it has been indicated that enrichment of the Ca2+ concentration inside cells triggers mitochondria-dependent apoptosis32. Demonstrating the above hypothesis will be our next plan. On the other hand, GtACRs conduct Cl− ions according to its concentration gradient from outside to inside across the membrane. Such ion transport naturally occurs in living cells (Fig. 1), and therefore harmlessness of GtACRs can be expected. In fact, worms expressing GtACR1 or GtACR2 could survive for 30 h under green (520 ± 10 nm) light at an intensity of 2.1 × 10−3 mW/mm2 for GtACR1 and blue (460 ± 10 nm) light at an intensity of 6.6 × 10−3 mW/mm2 for GtACR2. Those light intensities were sufficient for the full activation of GtACRs (see Fig. 5). To check whether the inhibitory effects of GtACRs were sustained in C. elegans during long-time illumination, we observed the locomotion of C. elegans every two hours under microscope. The worms expressing GtACRs have showed almost no movement within two hours from the onset of light illumination and thus GtACRs should have continuously inhibited the neurons of the worms. The body color and the motility of worms did not change within 30 h. Thus, GtACRs can be useful for long-term illumination with harmlessness.
To further clarify the additional side effects of Arch, we measured continuous neural silencing activity upon illumination. Arch was expressed in orexin neurons in the hypothalamus of mice, which has been implicated in the regulation of sleep/wakefulness and was reported to have spontaneous firings (1-2 Hz) in brain slice conditions33. Orexin neurons were loose–cell attached to record spontaneous firing events. As shown in the upper panels of Fig. 6B, the expression of Arch in cultured orexin neurons was successfully confirmed by green fluorescence from eGFP (left panel). The presence of the orexin neuron was proven by immunostaining with the fluorescent dye CF®594 for Arch (right panel). Panels C and D in Fig. 6 show spontaneous firing events and quantitative evaluation of their frequency during the continuous illumination. As seen, orexin neurons with Arch started firing even during 1 min illumination, presumably due to acidification outside the cells. We hypothesized that the ion transport function of ion transporter(s) naturally expressed in neurons is altered upon H+-induced hyperpolarization by Arch, resulting in the misfiring of the neurons. For comparison, we also expressed GtACR2 in orexin neurons as shown in the lower panels of Fig. 6B. The expression of GtACR2 was successfully confirmed by the red fluorescence from mCherry (left panel), while the presence of orexin neurons was proven by staining with the fluorescent dye CF®488 A (right panel). As seen in Fig. 6C,D, GtACR2 completely inhibited spontaneous firing up to at least 5 min. These results proved that GtACR2 works as a stable neural silencer for a long period without any undesired firing.
In conclusion, we demonstrated in this study that GtACRs can be an in vivo powerful neural silencing tool in optogenetics providing extremely high sensitivity, high temporal resolution, harmlessness and long-term silencing. We believe that the advantages of GtACRs would be of high interests for neuroscientists.
Methods
Plasmid construction for transgenic C. elegans
The expression plasmid for Arch was prepared as a fusion construct with the gene encoding fluorescent protein eGFP as described previously14. Expression plasmids for ACR1-eGFP and ACR2-eGFP were prepared according to the construction strategy shown in Fig. S1. In short, genes encoding the seven-transmembrane (TM) domains of GtACR1 (Genbank accession no. KP171708, amino acid residues from the 1st to the 269th position) and GtACR2 (Genbank accession no. KP171709, amino acid residues from the 1st to the 266th position), which are sufficient for anion transport activity34, were chemically synthesized by GenScript Japan Inc (Tokyo, Japan) with NdeI and XhoI restriction enzyme sites as described previously34. Those genes were then inserted into the pET22b plasmid vector using the NdeI and XhoI restriction enzyme sites. During the process, the plasmid pDEST-F25B3.3p (a kind gift from Dr. Hidehito Kuroyanagi)35,36 was used as a destination vector. Finally the genes were fused with eGFP on the expression plasmid using the Gateway system (Invitrogen, USA). This cloning strategy resulted in the following peptide sequences: ACR1[1MSSI----NVDG269]-TS-eGFP and ACR2[1MASQ----KPEA266]-TS-eGFP (Fig. S1). The underlined letters indicate the additional restriction enzyme site SpeI, which was used for the gene replacement among genes for Arch, GtACR1 and GtACR2. All constructed plasmids were analyzed using an automated sequencer (ABI 3500 Genetic Analyzer, Life Technologies Ltd., USA and Eurofins Genomics, Japan) to confirm the expected nucleotide sequences.
Transgenic C. elegans worms were generated by microinjection of the plasmid DNAs (150 ng) into the distal arms of gonads of N2 hermaphrodites as previously described14,30. In addition to those plasmids, the pRF4 plasmid (rol-6d, 150 ng), a transgenic marker conferring the Roller phenotype, was injected together into the worms to create the transgenic line Ex(F25B3.3p::ACR1::egfp, rol-6d), Ex(F25B3.3p::ACR2::egfp, rol-6d) and Ex(F25B3.3p::Arch::egfp, rol-6d). Worms were grown in the dark on Nematode Growth Medium (NGM) plates seeded with a solution of Escherichia coli OP50 and 500 µM ATR (Sigma, USA) as described previously14,30.
Microscopic observation
The fluorescence signals for eGFP were observed using an IX71 inverted microscope (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) with a fluorescence mirror unit (U-MGFPHQ, Olympus) and a mercury lamp (U-LH100HGAPO, Olympus). Fluorescence images were acquired with the CCD camera (ORCA-AG, Hamamatsu Photonics, Japan) using MetaVue software (Molecular Devices, USA) and were analyzed using ImageJ (NIH, Bethesda, MD, USA) and MATLAB (MathWorks, USA) software. The expression levels of the opsins were estimated by subtracting the sum of the autofluorescence in Fig. 2D from the sum of the fluorescence in Fig. 2A–C as expressed in the following equation (1);
where \({I}_{i,j}^{K}\) is the pixel value of the fluorescence image at (i, j) pixel and the symbol K indicates the image 2 A, 2B or 2 C, M and N are respectively the number of pixels along the x- and y-axes, and \({P}_{{eGFP}}^{K}\) is the total eGFP fluorescence signal as the expression level.
For locomotion analysis under varying light intensities, 15 transgenic worms were individually transferred to a fresh NGM plate containing 500 µM ATR, where worms exhibiting the Roller phenotype were chosen as candidate transgenic worms. With strains in which the expression of ACR1-eGFP or ACR2-eGFP was driven by a pan-neuronal promoter, worms showing intense eGFP signals were further selected among Rollers for the assay. The worms were illuminated with a mercury lamp through cognate excitation filters, MX0520 (520 ± 10 nm, Asahi Spectra, Japan), MX0460 (460 ± 10 nm, Asahi Spectra), and U-MRFPHQ (545 ± 10 nm, Olympus) for ACR1-eGFP, ACR2-eGFP and Arch-eGFP, respectively. Images of moving animals were recorded using a CCD camera mounted on the microscope. The relative body length of each worm before and after the illumination was also calculated using image processing and analysis software, Wriggle Tracker (Library Co., Japan) and Move-Tr/2D (Library Co.). The light pulses for inducing the body length change were constructed by an optical shutter (VMM-T1J, VINCENT ASSOCIATES, USA). For measurements of the fraction of paralyzed worms at specific wavelengths and intensities of light, we used 9 band-pass filters (full width at half-maximum (FWHM) = 10 nm, Asahi Spectra) and 6 neutral-density (ND) filters (OptoSigma, Japan). The light intensity was measured at the object plane using an optical power meter (#3664, Hioki, Japan) with an optical sensor (#9742, Hioki). Whether the worms showed paralysis or not was judged by observing its whole body movement within 1.0 second after the onset of the illumination. For the series of illumination experiments with varying light intensities (from 1.9 × 10−4 to 3.0 mW/mm2), worms were used only once, and were then discarded. All experiments were performed at room temperature (20–25°C) in the dark.
Expression and purification of GtACRs expressed in HEK293T cells
The cDNAs encoding the 7 TM domains of ACR1 (from the 1st to the 295th position) and ACR2 (from the 1st to the 291th position) were fused with a hexahistidine-tag sequence at their C-termini and were inserted into the mammalian expression vector pCAGGS as previously described37,38. The plasmids were transfected into HEK293T cells using the calcium-phosphate method and protein expression was carried out according to previously described methods37,39. After a one day incubation of the transfected cells, ATR was added into the medium (final concentration; 5 μM). After an additional day incubation in the dark, the cells were collected by centrifugation (7,500 × g, 10 min) at 4 °C. The collected cells were disrupted by sonication and solubilized in Buffer A (50 mM HEPES and 140 mM NaCl, pH 6.5) containing 1% w/v n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside (DDM, Dojindo Laboratories, Japan). The solubilized fraction was collected by ultracentrifugation (123,400 × g, 30 min) at 4 °C and the supernatant was applied to a Ni2+ affinity column (GE Healthcare, USA). Thereafter, the column was washed extensively with Buffer B (20 mM HEPES, 300 mM NaCl, 5% w/v glycerol, 0.02% DDM, pH 7.4) containing 20 mM imidazole to remove nonspecifically bound proteins, after which the histidine-tagged proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of imidazole. For GtACR1, the purified proteins were then further applied to an anion-exchange column (GE Healthcare) in Buffer C (20 mM Tris, 0.05% DDM, pH 8.0). Thereafter, the column was washed extensively with Buffer C and then eluted with a linear gradient of NaCl. The purified proteins were concentrated and their buffers were exchanged using an Amicon Ultra filter (30,000 Mw cut-off; Millipore, USA) to Buffer B. Absorption spectra of the purified GtACRs were recorded using an UV-visible spectrophotometer (Shimadzu UV-2400, Japan) at room temperature (around 25 °C).
Animal usage
All experimental protocols that involved animals in this project were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees, Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University, Japan. All experiments in this study involving the use of mice were performed in accordance with approved guidelines of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees, Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University, Japan. All efforts were made to reduce the number of animals used and also to minimize the suffering and pain of animals. Animals were maintained on a 12-hour light-dark cycle (lights were turned on at 8:00 am), with free access to food and water.
Electrophysiological measurements of murine orexin neurons
Acute brain slice preparations and subsequent electrophysiological experiments were adopted from a protocol published elsewhere40. Briefly, adult male mice (4–5 months old) with a genotype of either orexin-EGFP-Cre or orexin-Arch-GFP, in which orexin-producing neurons (orexin neurons) exclusively express Cre recombinase or Arch under control of the prepro-orexin promoter, respectively, were used for electrophysiological recordings. A Cre-inducible adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector carrying GtACR2 (AAVdj-CMV-FLEX-ACR2-2A-mCherry) was injected into the lateral hypothalamus (600 nL, 1 × 1013 particles/ml) of orexin-EGFP-Cre mice. Three weeks post-injection, mice were anesthetized and decapitated, after which their brains were quickly removed and chilled in ice-cold cutting solution (in mM: 110 K-gluconate, 15KCl, 0.05 EGTA, 5 HEPES, 26.2 NaHCO3, 25 glucose, 3.3 MgCl2 and 0.0015 (±)-3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl) propyl-1-phosphonic acid) gassed with 95% O2 and 5% CO2. Coronal brain slices (300 µm thick) that contained the lateral hypothalamus were generated using a vibratome (VTA-1200S; Leica, Germany). The brain slices were then temporarily preserved in an incubation chamber containing bath solution (124 mM NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 2 mM CaCl2, 1.23 mM NaH2PO4, 26 mM NaHCO3 and 25 mM glucose) and were gassed with 95% O2 and 5% CO2 in a 35°C water bath. The brain slices were then incubated at room temperature (24–28°C) in the same incubation chamber for 30–60 min. Orexin neurons expressing Arch or GtACR2 in each brain slice were identified by the green fluorescence of eGFP and the red fluorescence of mCherry, respectively. A positive pressure was introduced in the patch pipette and it was moved towards the cell. A loose cell-attached configuration was achieved by making a loose-seal with the cell membrane. Different wavelengths of light were provided by a light source that uses a light-emitting diode (Spectra light engine; Lumencor, USA) and were guided to the BX51WI fluorescent microscope (Olympus) with a liquid light fiber 1 cm in diameter. The brain slices were illuminated with blue (475 ± 17.5 nm, 15.4 mW) or green (549 ± 7.5 nm, 20 mW) light through the objective lens. An Axopatch 200B amplifier (Axon Instruments, Molecular Devices, USA) was used for recording. Data acquisition was performed using pClamp 10.2 software (Molecular Devices) via a Digidata 1322 A (Axon Instruments).
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Acknowledgements
We thank Ms. Satoko Doi, Dr. Hidehito Kuroyanagi and Dr. Satoshi Koike for preparation of the purified GtACR2, for supplying a pDEST-F25B3.3p plasmid and for supplying HEK293T cell lines, respectively. The pCAGGS vector was kindly provided by the RIKEN BRC through the National BioResource Project of the MEXT, Japan. This work was financially supported by JSPS-KAKENHI Grant Number JP18H06051 to AS, JP15K18519 to TT, JP18H02523 to AY, and JP15H04363, JP15H00878, JP25104005 and JP17H05726 to YS. This work was also supported by JST-CREST (JPMJCR1656) to AY and YS, and AMED (17933570) to YS.
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T.Y., M.M., K.K., T.T., S.C., A.Y., S.T. and Y.S. designed the experiments. T.Y., M.M., K.K. and S.C. performed the experiments. T.Y., M.M., K.K., A.S. and S.C. analyzed the data. T.Y., K.K., A.S., S.C., A. Y. and Y.S. wrote the paper. All authors discussed the results of the paper.
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Yamanashi, T., Maki, M., Kojima, K. et al. Quantitation of the neural silencing activity of anion channelrhodopsins in Caenorhabditis elegans and their applicability for long-term illumination. Sci Rep 9, 7863 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-44308-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-44308-x
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