4.5 Article

Biophysical characterization of light-gated ion channels using planar automated patch clamp

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MOLECULAR NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2022.976910

Keywords

channelrhodopsins; optogenetics; potassium channels; kalium channelrhodopsins; automated patch clamp; light-gated channels

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Channelrhodopsins are proteins that guide phototaxis and have applications in optogenetics. This study reports the use of a high-throughput automated patch-clamp platform for the characterization of ChRs, providing a more efficient method than manual patch clamping.
Channelrhodopsins (ChRs) are proteins that guide phototaxis in protists and exhibit light-gated channel conductance when their genes are heterologously expressed in mammalian cells. ChRs are widely used as molecular tools to control neurons and cardiomyocytes with light (optogenetics). Cation- and anion-selective ChRs (CCRs and ACRs, respectively) enable stimulation and inhibition of neuronal activity by depolarization and hyperpolarization of the membrane, respectively. More than 400 natural ChR variants have been identified so far, and high-throughput polynucleotide sequencing projects add many more each year. However, electrophysiological characterization of new ChRs lags behind because it is mostly done by time-consuming manual patch clamp (MPC). Here we report using a high-throughput automated patch clamp (APC) platform, SyncroPatch 384i from Nanion Technologies, for ChR research. We find that this instrument can be used for determination of the light intensity dependence and current-voltage relationships in ChRs and discuss its advantages and limitations.

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