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A light-gated potassium channel for sustained neuronal inhibition.

Laura AlberioAndrea LocarnoAndrea SaponaroEdoardo RomanoValérie BercierShahad AlbadriFederica SimeoniSilvia MoleriSilvia PelucchiAlessandro PorroElena MarcelloNoemi BarsottiKerri KukovetzArjen J BoenderAndrea ContestabileShizhen LuoAubin MoutalYingshi JiGiulia RomaniMonica BeltrameFilippo Del BeneMonica Di LucaRajesh KhannaHenry M ColecraftMassimo PasqualettiGerhard ThielRaffaella ToniniAnna Moroni
Published in: Nature methods (2018)
Currently available inhibitory optogenetic tools provide short and transient silencing of neurons, but they cannot provide long-lasting inhibition because of the requirement for high light intensities. Here we present an optimized blue-light-sensitive synthetic potassium channel, BLINK2, which showed good expression in neurons in three species. The channel is activated by illumination with low doses of blue light, and in our experiments it remained active over (tens of) minutes in the dark after the illumination was stopped. This activation caused long periods of inhibition of neuronal firing in ex vivo recordings of mouse neurons and impaired motor neuron response in zebrafish in vivo. As a proof-of-concept application, we demonstrated that in a freely moving rat model of neuropathic pain, the activation of a small number of BLINK2 channels caused a long-lasting (>30 min) reduction in pain sensation.
Keyphrases
  • neuropathic pain
  • spinal cord
  • spinal cord injury
  • chronic pain
  • poor prognosis
  • pain management
  • light emitting