Publication details

Chemical Targeting of Voltage Sensitive Dyes to Specific Cells and Molecules in the Brain

Authors

FIALA Tomáš WANG Jihang DUNN Matthew SEBEJ Peter NWADIBIA Ekeoma MARTINEZ Diana M CHEETHAM Claire E J FOGLE Keri J PALLADINO Michael J BANDO Yuki YUSTE Rafael FREYBERG Zachary SULZER David SAMES Dalibor CHOI Se Joon FIALOVA Eva

Year of publication 2020
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of the American Chemical Society
Citation FIALA, Tomáš, Jihang WANG, Matthew DUNN, Peter SEBEJ, Ekeoma NWADIBIA, Diana M MARTINEZ, Claire E J CHEETHAM, Keri J FOGLE, Michael J PALLADINO, Yuki BANDO, Rafael YUSTE, Zachary FREYBERG, David SULZER, Dalibor SAMES, Se Joon CHOI and Eva FIALOVA. Chemical Targeting of Voltage Sensitive Dyes to Specific Cells and Molecules in the Brain. Journal of the American Chemical Society. WASHINGTON: AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2020, vol. 142, No 20, p. 9285-9301. ISSN 0002-7863. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c00861.
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c00861
Description Voltage sensitive fluorescent dyes (VSDs) are important tools for probing signal transduction in neurons and other excitable cells. The impact of these highly lipophilic sensors has, however, been limited due to the lack of cell-specific targeting methods in brain tissue or living animals. We address this key challenge by introducing a nongenetic molecular platform for celland molecule-specific targeting of synthetic VSDs in the brain. We employ a dextran polymer particle to overcome the inherent lipophilicity of VSDs by dynamic encapsulation and high-affinity ligands to target the construct to specific neuronal cells utilizing only native components of the neurotransmission machinery at physiological expression levels. Dichloropane, a monoamine transporter ligand, enables targeting of dense dopaminergic axons in the mouse striatum and sparse noradrenergic axons in the mouse cortex in acute brain slices. PFQX in conjunction with ligand-directed acyl imidazole chemistry enables covalent labeling of AMPA-type glutamate receptors in the same brain regions. Probe variants bearing either a classical electrochromic ANEP dye or state-of-the-art VoltageFluor-type dye respond to membrane potential changes in a similar manner to the parent dyes, as shown by whole-cell patch recording. We demonstrate the feasibility of optical voltage recording with our probes in brain tissue with one-photon and two-photon fluorescence microscopy and define the signal limits of optical voltage imaging with synthetic sensors under a low photon budget determined by the native expression levels of the target proteins. This work demonstrates the feasibility of a chemical targeting approach and expands the possibilities of cell-specific imaging and pharmacology.

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