Structure-Guided Transformation of Channelrhodopsin into a Light-Activated Chloride Channel SCIENCE Berndt, A., Lee, S. Y., Ramakrishnan, C., Deisseroth, K. 2014; 344 (6182): 420-424

Abstract

Using light to silence electrical activity in targeted cells is a major goal of optogenetics. Available optogenetic proteins that directly move ions to achieve silencing are inefficient, pumping only a single ion per photon across the cell membrane rather than allowing many ions per photon to flow through a channel pore. Building on high-resolution crystal-structure analysis, pore vestibule modeling, and structure-guided protein engineering, we designed and characterized a class of channelrhodopsins (originally cation-conducting) converted into chloride-conducting anion channels. These tools enable fast optical inhibition of action potentials and can be engineered to display step-function kinetics for stable inhibition, outlasting light pulses and for orders-of-magnitude-greater light sensitivity of inhibited cells. The resulting family of proteins defines an approach to more physiological, efficient, and sensitive optogenetic inhibition.

View details for DOI 10.1126/science.1252367

View details for Web of Science ID 000334867800043