BLINK1 is a synthetic light-gated potassium (K+) channel reversibly activated by blue light, encoded by a single gene, whose activity does not need the addition of cofactors. Transient ectopic expression of BLINK1 reversibly inhibits the escape response in light-exposed two-days-old Zebrafish larvae, confirming in vivo applicability of BLINK1 as a single-component optogenetic tool that can establish sustained, physiological hyperpolarization of cells at K+ electrochemical potential (EK). In HEK293 cells, we record a measurable BLINK1 current in less than 10% of the transfected cells. Immunolocalization experiments confirmed a very low frequency of BLINK1-specific signal on the plasma membrane (PM) of transfected cells and retention of the protein in inner cellular compartments. To fix this problem, we have added to the channel C-terminal region diacidic ER export signals from other K+ channels (mKir2.1, KAT1), plasma membrane trafficking sequences (YXXΦ motifs) and mode III 14-3-3 binding sites found in other channels and pumps (TASK channels, MHA2 H+-ATP-ase, KAT1). In most cases, addition of trafficking motifs increased BLINK1 presence at the PM up to 30-40 % (cells with measurable current on the total of transfected cells) but the channel lost its light regulation. The best results were obtained with the clone renamed BLINK2, that shows a moderate improvement of expression rate (26% of transfected HEK 293T cells) but intact light regulation of the current. However, BLINK2 has slower kinetics (t1/2 on= 5 min; t1/2 off= 8 min) than the parental channel BLINK1 (on= 87s; off 168 s) and a 60 to 90 s delay in opening after light on. To improve channel kinetics, we have introduced mutations known to tune the LOV domain photocycle: BLINK2 Q513D shows indeed a reduced delay in opening (30 sec). BLINK2 and BLINK2 Q513D are currently under investigation for optogenetic applicability in vivo, both in zebrafish and mouse models.

Improving trafficking and kinetics of a synthetic light-gated Potassium channel / L.S. Alberio, G. Defranceschi, F. Simeoni, P. Zuccolini, G. Thiel, A. Moroni. ((Intervento presentato al 61. convegno Biophysical Society tenutosi a New Orleans nel 2017.

Improving trafficking and kinetics of a synthetic light-gated Potassium channel

L.S. Alberio
Primo
;
P. Zuccolini;A. Moroni
2017

Abstract

BLINK1 is a synthetic light-gated potassium (K+) channel reversibly activated by blue light, encoded by a single gene, whose activity does not need the addition of cofactors. Transient ectopic expression of BLINK1 reversibly inhibits the escape response in light-exposed two-days-old Zebrafish larvae, confirming in vivo applicability of BLINK1 as a single-component optogenetic tool that can establish sustained, physiological hyperpolarization of cells at K+ electrochemical potential (EK). In HEK293 cells, we record a measurable BLINK1 current in less than 10% of the transfected cells. Immunolocalization experiments confirmed a very low frequency of BLINK1-specific signal on the plasma membrane (PM) of transfected cells and retention of the protein in inner cellular compartments. To fix this problem, we have added to the channel C-terminal region diacidic ER export signals from other K+ channels (mKir2.1, KAT1), plasma membrane trafficking sequences (YXXΦ motifs) and mode III 14-3-3 binding sites found in other channels and pumps (TASK channels, MHA2 H+-ATP-ase, KAT1). In most cases, addition of trafficking motifs increased BLINK1 presence at the PM up to 30-40 % (cells with measurable current on the total of transfected cells) but the channel lost its light regulation. The best results were obtained with the clone renamed BLINK2, that shows a moderate improvement of expression rate (26% of transfected HEK 293T cells) but intact light regulation of the current. However, BLINK2 has slower kinetics (t1/2 on= 5 min; t1/2 off= 8 min) than the parental channel BLINK1 (on= 87s; off 168 s) and a 60 to 90 s delay in opening after light on. To improve channel kinetics, we have introduced mutations known to tune the LOV domain photocycle: BLINK2 Q513D shows indeed a reduced delay in opening (30 sec). BLINK2 and BLINK2 Q513D are currently under investigation for optogenetic applicability in vivo, both in zebrafish and mouse models.
English
feb-2017
Settore BIO/11 - Biologia Molecolare
Presentazione breve
Intervento inviato
Comitato scientifico
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
Biophysical Society
New Orleans
2017
61
Convegno internazionale
L.S. Alberio, G. Defranceschi, F. Simeoni, P. Zuccolini, G. Thiel, A. Moroni
Improving trafficking and kinetics of a synthetic light-gated Potassium channel / L.S. Alberio, G. Defranceschi, F. Simeoni, P. Zuccolini, G. Thiel, A. Moroni. ((Intervento presentato al 61. convegno Biophysical Society tenutosi a New Orleans nel 2017.
Prodotti della ricerca::14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/482956
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