Optogenetics Flashcards

1
Q

What is the basic structure of a neuron?

A

Axons synapse onto dendrites

  • electrical signal is turned into AP
  • moves down axon hillock, down axon and synapses onto another neuron, releasing NT to transmit the signal.
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2
Q

What is the membrane potential?

A

The voltage (difference in electrical charge) across the plasma membrane

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3
Q

Why is RMP usually -70mV?

A

We have a high IC K+ concentration and a high EC Na+ concentration.

  • K+ exits through channels down its concentration gradient
  • 3Na+/2K+ exchanger keeps the cell at -70mV
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4
Q

What are the steps in AP initiation?

A
  • resting state (-70mV, VGK/Na channels closed
  • stimulus
  • Depolarisation (Net positive flow into neuron)
  • Threshold reached (-50mV - VGNa channels open)
  • VGK channels open, K+ efflux (repolarisation)
  • Hyperpolarisation
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5
Q

What are light-activated proteins?

A
  • instead of a ligand binding to receptors, light acts on it - APs are transmitted when light comes in (rods and cones do this)
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6
Q

How can we get neurons to produce Channelrhodopsin on their surface?

A
  • Insert genes for channelrhodopsin into virus
  • these can insert the channelrhodopsin DNA into the cells of the neuron
  • neuron can then express channelrhodopsin on its surface
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7
Q

What are the three different types of opsins we can use?

A
  • Channelrhodopsins (cation channels - depolarisation/excitation)
  • Arch (proton pump - hyperpolarisation/ inhibition)
  • Halorhodopsins (Chloride pump - hyperpolarisation/inhibition)
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8
Q

What wavelengths activate each of the three opsins?

A

ChR2 - blue
Arch - green
NpHR - yellow

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9
Q

Which promoters determine which cell types? (CMV/CAG, GFAP, hSYN,CamKII)

A
  • CMV/CAG = All neurons and glia
  • GFAP = Glia only
  • hSYN = Neurons only
  • CamKII = Excitatory neurons only
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10
Q

What do the different arrangements of LoxP do?

A
  • if LoxPs are facing each other, gene inbetween will be flipped around (may become transcribable/un-transcribable
  • if LoxPs are facing in the same direction, then genes inbetween will be excised.
  • If LoxPs are on two different sections of DNA, Cre will swap them around
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11
Q

What does Cre recombinase do?

A

Recognises LoxP sites

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12
Q

How does the CreLox system work?

A
  • Create one mouse with ChR inserted into genome - flanked with two LoxP sites facing each other
  • Stop codon upstream means that ChR wont be expressed
  • Create another with Cre recombinase that is only expressed in specific cells
  • When these two mate, the first generation mouse will be able to express ChR because the Cre excises the STOP codon upstream
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13
Q

How can you modulate neuronal activity using opsins?

A
  • Can use a blue light to open ChR and cause cation influx - depolarisation
  • Can use yellow light to activate halorhodopsins and cause chloride influx - hyperpoalrisation
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14
Q

2 good and 2 bad things about using optogenetics in humans

A

Good

  • faster than drugs
  • more specific than electrical stimulation

Bad

  • only gene therapy approved in Europe
  • Would we recognise the opsins as non-self and start an immune response?
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