Strength of Activation and Temporal Dynamics of BioLuminescent-Optogenetics in Response to Systemic Injections of the Luciferin

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

BioLuminescent OptoGenetics (“BL-OG”) is a chemogenetic method that can evoke optogenetic reactions in the brain non-invasively. In BL-OG, an enzyme that catalyzes a light producing reaction (i.e., a luciferase) is tethered to an optogenetic element that is activated in response to bioluminescent light. Bioluminescence is generated by injecting a chemical substrate ( luciferin , e.g., h-Coelenterazine; h- CTZ ) that is catalyzed by the luciferase. By directly injecting the luciferin into the brain, we showed that bioluminescent light is proportional to spiking activity, and this relationship scales as a function of luciferin dosage. Here, we build on these previous observations by characterizing the temporal dynamics and dose response curves of BL-OG effects to intravenous (IV) injections of the luciferin. We imaged bioluminescence through a thinned skull of mice running on a wheel, while delivering h-CTZ via the tail vein with different dosage concentrations and injection rates. The data reveal a systematic relationship between strength of bioluminescence and h-CTZ dosage, with higher concentration generating stronger bioluminescence. We also found that bioluminescent activity occurs rapidly (< 60 seconds after IV injection) regardless of concentration dosage. However, as expected, the onset time of bioluminescence is delayed as the injection rate decreases. Notably, the strength and time decay of bioluminescence is invariant to the injection rate of h-CTZ. Taken together, these data show that BL-OG effects are highly consistent across injection parameters of h-CTZ, highlighting the reliability of BL-OG as a non-invasive neuromodulation method.

Article activity feed