Genetically encoded voltage indicator
Genetically encoded voltage indicator (or GEVI) is a protein that can sense membrane potential in a cell and relate the change in voltage to a form of output, often fluorescent level.[1] It is a promising optogenetic recording tool that enables exporting electrophysiological signals from cultured cells, live animals, and ultimately human brain. Examples of notable GEVIs include ArcLight,[2] ASAP1,[3] ASAP3,[4] Archons,[5] SomArchon,[6] and Ace2N-mNeon.[7]
History
Despite that the idea of optical measurement of neuronal activity was proposed in the late 1960s,[8] the first successful GEVI that was convenient enough to put into actual use was not developed until technologies of genetic engineering had become mature in the late 1990s. The first GEVI, coined FlaSh,[9] was constructed by fusing a modified green fluorescent protein with a voltage-sensitive K+ channel (Shaker). Unlike fluorescent proteins, the discovery of new GEVIs were seldomly inspired by the nature, for it is hard to find an organism which naturally has the ability to change its fluorescence based on voltage. Therefore, new GEVIs are mostly the products of genetic and protein engineering.
Two methods can be utilized to find novel GEVIs: rational design and directed evolution. The former method contributes to the most of new GEVI variants, but recent researches using directed evolution have shown promising results in GEVI optimization.[10][11]
Structure
GEVI can have many configuration designs in order to realize voltage sensing function.[12] An essential feature of GEVI structure is that it must situate on the cell membrane. Conceptually, the structure of a GEVI should permit the function of sensing the voltage difference and reporting it by change in fluorescence. Usually, the voltage-sensing domain (VSD) of a GEVI spans across the membrane, and is connected to the fluorescent protein(s). However, it is not necessary that sensing and reporting should happen in different structures, e.g. Archons.
By structure, GEVIs can be classified into four categories based on the current findings: (1) GEVIs contain a fluorescent protein FRET pair, e.g. VSFP1, (2) Single opsin GEVIs, e.g. Arch, (3) Opsin-FP FRET pair GEVIs, e.g. MacQ-mCitrine, (4) single FP with special types of voltage sensing domains, e.g. ASAP1. A majority of GEVIs are based on the Ciona intestinalis voltage sensitive phosphatase (Ci-VSP or Ci-VSD (domain)), which was discovered in 2005 from the genomic survey of the organism.[13] Some GEVIs might have similar components, but with different positioning of them. For example, ASAP1 and ArcLight both use a VSD and one FP, but the FP of ASAP1 is on the outside of the cell whereas that of ArcLight is on the inside, and the two FPs of VSFP-Butterfly are separated by the VSD, while the two FPs of Mermaid are relatively close to each other.
GEVI[A] | Year | Sensing | Reporting | Precursor |
---|---|---|---|---|
FlaSh[9] | 1997 | Shaker (K+ channel) | GFP | - |
VSFP1[14] | 2001 | Rat Kv2.1 (K+ channel) | FRET pair: CFP and YFP | - |
SPARC[15] | 2002 | Rat Na+ channel | GFP | - |
VSFP2's[16] | 2007 | Ci-VSD | FRET pair: CFP (Cerulean) and YFP (Citrine) | VSFP1 |
Flare[17] | 2007 | Kv1.4 (K+ channel) | YFP | FlaSh |
VSFP3.1[18] | 2008 | Ci-VSD | CFP | VSFP2's |
Mermaid[19] | 2008 | Ci-VSD | FRET pair: Marine GFP (mUKG) and OFP (mKOκ) | VSFP2's |
hVOS[20] | 2008 | Dipicrylamine | GFP | - |
Red-shifted VSFP's[21] | 2009 | Ci-VSD | RFP/YFP (Citrine, mOrange2, TagRFP, or mKate2) | VSFP3.1 |
PROPS[22] | 2011 | Modified green-absorbing proteorhodopsin (GPR) | Same as left | - |
Zahra, Zahra 2[23] | 2012 | Nv-VSD, Dr-VSD | FRET pair: CFP (Cerulean) and YFP (Citrine) | VSFP2's |
ArcLight[24] | 2012 | Ci-VSD | Modified super ecliptic pHluorin | - |
Arch[25] | 2012 | Archaerhodopsin 3 | Same as left | - |
ElectricPk[26] | 2012 | Ci-VSD | Circularly permuted EGFP | VSFP3.1 |
VSFP-Butterfly[27] | 2012 | Ci-VSD | FRET pair: YFP (mCitrine) and RFP (mKate2) | VSFP2's |
VSFP-CR[28] | 2013 | Ci-VSD | FRET pair: GFP (Clover) and RFP(mRuby2) | VSFP2.3 |
Mermaid2[29] | 2013 | Ci-VSD | FRET pair: CFP (seCFP2) and YFP | Mermaid |
Mac GEVIs[30] | 2014 | Mac rhodopsin (FRET acceptor) | FRET doner: mCitrine, or mOrange2 | - |
QuasAr1, QuasAr2[31] | 2014 | Modified Archaerhodopsin 3 | Same as left | Arch |
Archer[32] | 2014 | Modified Archaerhodopsin 3 | Same as left | Arch |
ASAP1[3] | 2014 | Modified Gg-VSD | Circularly permuted GFP | - |
Ace GEVIs[33] | 2015 | Modified Ace rhodopsin | FRET doner: mNeonGreen | Mac GEVIs |
ArcLightning[34] | 2015 | Ci-VSD | Modified super ecliptic pHluorin | ArcLight |
Pado[35] | 2016 | Voltage-gated proton channel | Super ecliptic pHluorin | - |
ASAP2f[36] | 2016 | Modified Gg-VSD | Circularly permuted GFP | ASAP1 |
FlicR1[37] | 2016 | Ci-VSD | Circularly permuted RFP (mApple) | VSFP3.1 |
Bongwoori[38] | 2017 | Ci-VSD | Modified super ecliptic pHluorin | ArcLight |
ASAP2s[39] | 2017 | Modified Gg-VSD | Circularly permuted GFP | ASAP1 |
ASAP-Y[40] | 2017 | Modified Gg-VSD | Circularly permuted GFP | ASAP1 |
(pa)QuasAr3(-s)[41] | 2019 | Modified Archaerhodopsin 3 | Same as left | QuasAr2 |
Voltron(-ST) | 2019 | Modified Ace rhodopsin (Ace2) | FRET doner: Janelia Fluor (chemical) | - |
ASAP3[4] | 2019 | Modified Gg-VSD | Circularly permuted GFP | ASAP2s |
- ↑Names in italic denote GEVIs not named.
Characteristics
A GEVI can be evaluated by its many characteristics. These traits can be classified into two categories: performance and compatibility. The performance properties include brightness, photostability, sensitivity, kinetics (speed), linearity of response, etc., while the compatibility properties cover toxicity (phototoxicity), plasma membrane localization, adaptability of deep-tissue imaging, etc.[42] For now, no existing GEVI meets all the desired properties, so searching for a perfect GEVI is still a quite competitive research area.
Applications and advantages
Different types of GEVIs are seen being used in many biological or physiological research areas. It is thought to be superior to conventional voltage detecting methods like electrode-based electrophysiological recordings, calcium imaging, or voltage sensitive dyes. It can show neuron signals with subcellular spatial resolution.[43] It has fast temporal resolution (sub-millisecond[33]), matching or surpassing that of the electrode recordings, and about one magnitude faster than calcium imaging. Researchers have used it to probe neural communications of an intact brain (of Drosophila[44] or mouse[45]), electrical spiking of bacteria (E. coli[22]), and human stem-cell derived cardiomyocyte.[46][47]
References
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"We fused paQuasAr3 with a trafficking motif from the soma-localized KV2.1 potassium channel, which led to largely soma-localized expression (Fig. 2a, b). We called this construct paQuasAr3-s."
"We called QuasAr3(V59A) ‘photoactivated QuasAr3’ (paQuasAr3)."
"QuasAr2(K171R)-TS-citrine-TS-TS-TS-ER2, which we call QuasAr3."{{cite journal}}
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{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ Zhang, Joe Z.; Termglinchan, Vittavat; Shao, Ning-Yi; Itzhaki, Ilanit; Liu, Chun; Ma, Ning; Tian, Lei; Wang, Vicky Y.; Chang, Alex C. Y.; Guo, Hongchao; Kitani, Tomoya (2019-05-02). "A Human iPSC Double-Reporter System Enables Purification of Cardiac Lineage Subpopulations with Distinct Function and Drug Response Profiles". Cell Stem Cell. 24 (5): 802–811.e5. doi:10.1016/j.stem.2019.02.015. ISSN 1934-5909. PMID 30880024.