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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(16)2021 04 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33846241

ABSTRACT

Microscale needle-electrode devices offer neuronal signal recording capability in brain tissue; however, using needles of smaller geometry to minimize tissue damage causes degradation of electrical properties, including high electrical impedance and low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) recording. We overcome these limitations using a device assembly technique that uses a single needle-topped amplifier package, called STACK, within a device of ∼1 × 1 mm2 Based on silicon (Si) growth technology, a <3-µm-tip-diameter, 400-µm-length needle electrode was fabricated on a Si block as the module. The high electrical impedance characteristics of the needle electrode were improved by stacking it on the other module of the amplifier. The STACK device exhibited a voltage gain of >0.98 (-0.175 dB), enabling recording of the local field potential and action potentials from the mouse brain in vivo with an improved SNR of 6.2. Additionally, the device allowed us to use a Bluetooth module to demonstrate wireless recording of these neuronal signals; the chronic experiment was also conducted using STACK-implanted mice.


Subject(s)
Electroencephalography/instrumentation , Electrophysiology/instrumentation , Electrophysiology/methods , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Brain/physiology , Electric Impedance , Electrodes, Implanted/adverse effects , Electroencephalography/methods , Equipment Design , Male , Mice , Microelectrodes/adverse effects , Neurons/physiology , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(7)2022 Mar 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35408109

ABSTRACT

Membrane permeabilization stimulated by high-voltage electric pulses has been used to deliver cell-impermeable exogenous molecules. The electric field effect on the cells depends on various experimental parameters, such as electric field strength, the number of electric pulses, and the electroporation medium. In this study, we show the influence of the electroporation medium on membrane permeabilization stimulated by electrical short-circuiting via an aqueous droplet in dielectric oil, a novel methodology developed by our previous investigations. We investigated the membrane permeabilization by three methods, influx of calcium ions, uptake of nucleic acid-binding fluorophores (YO-PRO-1), and calcein leakage. We demonstrated that the external medium conductivity had a significant impact on the cells in all described experiments. The short-circuiting using a low-conductivity electroporation medium enhanced the formation of both transient and irreversible membrane pores. We also found that clathrin-mediated endocytosis contributed to YO-PRO-1 uptake when a cell culture medium was used as an electroporation medium.


Subject(s)
Electricity , Electroporation , Cell Membrane Permeability , Culture Media , Electric Conductivity , Electroporation/methods , Water
3.
Glia ; 65(1): 198-208, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27726182

ABSTRACT

Similar to neurons, microglia have an intrinsic molecular clock. The master clock oscillator Bmal1 modulates interleukin-6 upregulation in microglial cells exposed to lipopolysaccharide. Bmal1 can play a role in microglial inflammatory responses. We previously demonstrated that gliotransmitter ATP induces transient expression of the clock gene Period1 via P2X7 purinergic receptors in cultured microglia. In this study, we further investigated mechanisms underlying the regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokine production by clock molecules in microglial cells. Several clock gene transcripts exhibited oscillatory diurnal rhythmicity in microglial BV-2 cells. Real-time luciferase monitoring also showed diurnal oscillatory luciferase activity in cultured microglia from Per1::Luciferase transgenic mice. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) strongly induced the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines in BV-2 cells, whereas an siRNA targeting Brain and muscle aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator-like protein 1 (Bmal1), a core positive component of the microglial molecular clock, selectively inhibited LPS-induced interleukin-6 (IL-6) expression. In addition, LPS-induced IL-6 expression was attenuated in microglia from Bmal1-deficient mice. This phenotype was recapitulated by pharmacological disruption of oscillatory diurnal rhythmicity using the synthetic Rev-Erb agonist SR9011. Promoter analysis of the Il6 gene revealed that Bmal1 is required for LPS-induced IL-6 expression in microglia. Mice conditionally Bmal1 deficient in cells expressing CD11b, including microglia, exhibited less potent upregulation of Il6 expression following middle cerebral artery occlusion compared with that in control mice, with a significant attenuation of neuronal damage. These results suggest that the intrinsic microglial clock modulates the inflammatory response, including the positive regulation of IL-6 expression in a particular pathological situation in the brain, GLIA 2016. GLIA 2017;65:198-208.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Interleukin-6/metabolism , Microglia/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation/drug effects , Animals , Cell Line , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , Interleukin-6/genetics , Lipopolysaccharides/pharmacology , Mice, Knockout , Mice, Transgenic , Microglia/drug effects , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/metabolism , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , Time Factors , Up-Regulation
4.
Small ; 12(21): 2846-53, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27062044

ABSTRACT

Intracellular recording nanoscale electrode devices provide the advantages of a high spatial resolution and high sensitivity. However, the length of nanowire/nanotube-based nanoelectrodes is currently limited to <10 µm long due to fabrication issues for high-aspect-ratio nanoelectrodes. The concept reported here can address the technological limitations by fabricating >100 µm long nanoscale-tipped electrodes, which show intracellular recording capability.


Subject(s)
Electrodes , Action Potentials , Nanotubes/chemistry , Nanowires/chemistry , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
5.
Front Neurosci ; 18: 1186677, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38694901

ABSTRACT

DNA aptamers can bind specifically to biomolecules to modify their function, potentially making them ideal oligonucleotide therapeutics. Herein, we screened for DNA aptamer of melanopsin (OPN4), a blue-light photopigment in the retina, which plays a key role using light signals to reset the phase of circadian rhythms in the central clock. Firstly, 15 DNA aptamers of melanopsin (Melapts) were identified following eight rounds of Cell-SELEX using cells expressing melanopsin on the cell membrane. Subsequent functional analysis of each Melapt was performed in a fibroblast cell line stably expressing both Period2:ELuc and melanopsin by determining the degree to which they reset the phase of mammalian circadian rhythms in response to blue-light stimulation. Period2 rhythmic expression over a 24-h period was monitored in Period2:ELuc stable cell line fibroblasts expressing melanopsin. At subjective dawn, four Melapts were observed to advance phase by >1.5 h, while seven Melapts delayed phase by >2 h. Some Melapts caused a phase shift of approximately 2 h, even in the absence of photostimulation, presumably because Melapts can only partially affect input signaling for phase shift. Additionally, some Melaps were able to induce phase shifts in Per1::luc transgenic (Tg) mice, suggesting that these DNA aptamers may have the capacity to affect melanopsin in vivo. In summary, Melapts can successfully regulate the input signal and shifting phase (both phase advance and phase delay) of mammalian circadian rhythms in vitro and in vivo.

6.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 438(1): 145-51, 2013 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23876310

ABSTRACT

Recent studies have suggested that astrocytes release gliotransmitters (i.e., ATP, L-glutamate, D-serine, and peptide hormones) and participate actively in synaptic functioning. Although ATP release from astrocytes modulates the activity of neurons, the mechanisms regulating the ATP release from astrocytes and the source of ATP in astrocytes are not well understood. Recently a vesicular nucleotide transporter (VNUT)/solute carrier family 17, member 9 (SLC17A9) has been identified as a mediator of the active accumulation of ATP into vesicles. Here we show by immunocytochemical analysis under confocal microscope and live cell imaging under total internal reflection fluorescence microscope that lysosome-associated VNUT is responsible for ATP release in astrocytes. VNUT was expressed in both primary cultured cortical astrocytes and glioma cell line C6 cells, and mainly localized on lysosome in the cells. We found that VNUT-associated secretory lysosomes do not fully collapse into the plasma membrane after lysosomal exocytosis. We also found that inhibition of VNUT function by Evans Blue decreased ATP uptake into secretory lysosomes. Depletion and inhibition of endogenous VNUT by small interference RNA and Evans Blue, respectively decreased the amount of ATP release from the cells, whereas overexpression of VNUT increased it. Taken together, these findings indicate that the participation of VNUT in ATP storage in secretory lysosomes during lysosomal exocytosis of ATP from astrocytes.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Astrocytes/metabolism , Lysosomes/metabolism , Nucleotide Transport Proteins/metabolism , Synaptic Vesicles/metabolism , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Protein Transport/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
7.
Biomedicines ; 11(5)2023 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37239134

ABSTRACT

All organisms maintain an internal clock that matches the Earth's rotation over a period of 24 h, known as the circadian rhythm. Previously, we established Period1 luciferase (Per1::luc) transgenic (Tg) mice in order to monitor the expression rhythms of the Per1 clock gene in each tissue in real time using a bioluminescent reporter. The Per1 gene is a known key molecular regulator of the mammalian clock system in the autonomous central clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), and the peripheral tissues. Per1::luc Tg mice were used as a biosensing system of circadian rhythms. They were maintained by being fed ad lib (FF) and subsequently subjected to 4 hour (4 h) restricted feeding (RF) during the rest period under light conditions in order to examine whether the peripheral clocks of different parts in the digestive tract could be entrained. The peak points of the bioluminescent rhythms in the Per1::luc Tg mouse tissue samples were analyzed via cosine fitting. The bioluminescent rhythms of the cultured peripheral tissues of the esophagus and the jejunum exhibited phase shift from 5 to 11 h during RF, whereas those of the SCN tissue remained unchanged for 7 days during RF. We examined whether RF for 4 h during the rest period in light conditions could reset the activity rhythms, the central clock in the SCN, and the peripheral clock in the different points in the gastrointestinal tract. The fasting signals during RF did not entrain the SCN, but they did entrain each peripheral clock of the digestive system, the esophagus, and the jejunum. During RF for 7 days, the peak time of the esophagus tended to return to that of the FF control, unlike that of the jejunum; hence, the esophagus was regulated more strongly under the control of the cultured SCN compared to the jejunum. Thus, the peripheral clocks of the digestive system can entrain their molecular clock rhythms via RF-induced fasting signals in each degree, independently from the SCN.

8.
PLoS One ; 18(5): e0285444, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37146039

ABSTRACT

We investigated gene electrotransfer using electrical short-circuiting via a cell suspension droplet in dielectric oil. An aqueous droplet of a few microliters placed between a pair of electrodes can be deformed by an intense DC electric field depending on the electric field intensity. When a droplet containing suspended cells and plasmid DNA elongates during deformation and connects the electrodes, the resulting short circuit can cause successful gene electrotransfection into various mammalian cells. We also investigated the influence of the electroporation medium on membrane permeabilization and the mechanisms of gene electrotransfection using short-circuiting via an aqueous droplet. One aim of this study was to investigate the influence of the conductivity of electroporation medium on gene electrotransfer stimulated by short-circuiting. It was found that low-conductivity medium with plasmid DNA resulted in a significant decrease in cell viability compared to the high-conductivity medium with plasmid DNA. Therefore, we demonstrated the influence of exogenous DNA on membrane damage stimulated by droplet electroporation using a low-conductivity medium. Thus, electrical stimulation with the combination of plasmid DNA and the low-conductivity medium resulted in tremendous membrane damage. Linearized plasmid DNA stimulated more significant membrane damage than circular DNA. However, the size of linear DNA did not influence the efflux of small intracellular molecules.


Subject(s)
DNA , Electroporation , Animals , Electroporation/methods , Cell Membrane , Electric Conductivity , DNA/genetics , Plasmids/genetics , Mammals/genetics
9.
Biosens Bioelectron ; 240: 115605, 2023 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37669586

ABSTRACT

Diabetes is known to cause a variety of complications, having a high correlation with Alzheimer's disease. Electrophysiological recording using a microscale needle electrode is a promising technology for the study, however, diabetic brain tissue is more difficult to record neuronal activities than normal tissue due to these complications including the development of cerebrovascular disease. Here we show an electrophysiological methodology for diabetic db/db mice (+Leprdb/+Leprdb) using a 4-µm-tip diameter needle-electrode device. The needle electrode minimized the tissue injury when compared to a typical larger metal electrode, as confirmed by bleeding during penetration. The proposed electrode device showed both acute and chronic in vivo recording capabilities for diabetic mice while reducing the glial cells' responses. Because of these device characteristics, the 4-µm-tip diameter needle-electrode will allow electrophysiological studies on diabetes models of not only mice, as proven in this study, but also other animals.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Biosensing Techniques , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental , Animals , Mice , Neuroglia , Disease Models, Animal , Electrodes
10.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 420(2): 417-21, 2012 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22426478

ABSTRACT

Although the small GTPase Rho family Cdc42 has been shown to facilitate exocytosis through increasing the amount of hormones released, the precise mechanisms regulating the quantity of hormones released on exocytosis are not well understood. Here we show by live cell imaging analysis under TIRF microscope and immunocytochemical analysis under confocal microscope that Cdc42 modulated the number of fusion events and the number of dense-core vesicles produced in the cells. Overexpression of a wild-type or constitutively-active form of Cdc42 strongly facilitated high-KCl-induced exocytosis from the newly recruited plasma membrane vesicles in PC12 cells. By contrast, a dominant-negative form of Cdc42 inhibited exocytosis from both the newly recruited and previously docked plasma membrane vesicles. The number of intracellular dense-core vesicles was increased by the overexpression of both a wild-type and constitutively-active form of Cdc42. Consistently, activation of Cdc42 by overexpression of Tuba, a Golgi-associated guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Cdc42 increased the number of intracellular dense-core vesicles, whereas inhibition of Cdc42 by overexpression of the Cdc42/Rac interactive binding domain of neuronal Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein decreased the number of them. These findings suggest that Cdc42 facilitates exocytosis by modulating both the number of exocytosis-competent dense-core vesicles and the production of dense-core vesicles in PC12 cells.


Subject(s)
Exocytosis , Secretory Vesicles/physiology , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein/physiology , Animals , PC12 Cells , Rats , Secretory Vesicles/genetics , Secretory Vesicles/ultrastructure , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein/genetics
11.
J Bone Miner Metab ; 30(3): 254-69, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21766187

ABSTRACT

Biological phenomena that exhibit periodic activity are often referred as biorhythms or biological clocks. Among these, circadian rhythms, cyclic patterns reflecting a 24-h cycle, are the most obvious in many physiological activities including bone growth and metabolism. In the late 1990s, several clock genes were isolated and their primary structures and functions were identified. The feedback loop model of transcriptional factors was proposed to work as a circadian core oscillator not only in the suprachiasmatic nuclei of the anterior hypothalamus, which is recognized as the mammalian central clock, but also in various peripheral tissues including cartilage and bone. Looking back to embryonic development, the fundamental architecture of skeletal patterning is regulated by ultradian clocks that are defined as biorhythms that cycle more than once every 24 h. As post-genomic approaches, transcriptome analysis by micro-array and bioimaging assays to detect luminescent and fluorescent signals have been exploited to uncover a more comprehensive set of genes and spatio-temporal regulation of the clockwork machinery in animal models. In this review paper, we provide an overview of topics related to these molecular clocks in skeletal biology and medicine, and discuss how fluorescence imaging approaches can contribute to widening our views of this realm of biomedical science.


Subject(s)
Biological Clocks/physiology , Bone and Bones/metabolism , Animals , Biological Clocks/genetics , Body Patterning , Bone and Bones/anatomy & histology , Bone and Bones/embryology , Genomics , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Microscopy, Fluorescence
12.
Nanotechnology ; 23(41): 415301, 2012 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23018561

ABSTRACT

Nanoscale devices have the potential to measure biological tissues as well as individual cells/neurons. However, three-dimensional (3D) multi-site probing remains problematic because only planar-type device designs are applicable to sample surfaces. Herein we report 3D nanoscale electrode tipped microwire arrays with high aspect ratios. A nanoscale tipped wire is formed by isotropic silicon etching to the tip of a vapor-liquid-solid grown silicon microwire. After coating the wire with a metal (e.g., Pt and Au), only the nanotip section can be exposed from the surrounding outer shell (e.g., SiO(2) and parylene) by photoresist spray coating and subsequent cycled photoresist etchings. As a promising device application, we demonstrate the trapping of polystyrene nanoparticles in a solution using a fabricated Au-nanotip wire array. The sharpened nanotip has a 150 nm curvature radius and a 4.2 µm(2) electrode area. The nanotip wires exhibit a locally enhanced trapping performance with a low trapping voltage of 20 mV. Moreover, these trapped nanoparticles can be injected into a soft material (gelatin), demonstrating a multi-site wide-area batch depth injection and an assembly of nanoparticles. Such nanotip wire arrays should be applicable to trap numerous particles, including DNA/molecules attached to Au particles, and may realize injection into biological tissues and individual cells/neurons.


Subject(s)
Microarray Analysis/instrumentation , Nanoparticles/chemistry , Silicon/chemistry , Electrodes , Equipment Design , Gelatin/chemistry , Microtechnology , Polymers/chemistry , Polystyrenes/chemistry , Xylenes/chemistry
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(16): 6814-9, 2009 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19342491

ABSTRACT

Photoswitched tethered ligands (PTLs) can be used to remotely control protein function with light. We have studied the geometric and conformational factors that determine the efficacy of PTL gating in the ionotropic glutamate receptor iGluR6 using a family of photoiosomerizable MAG (maleimide-azobenzene-glutamate) PTLs that covalently attach to the clamshell ligand-binding domain. Experiments and molecular dynamics simulations of the modified proteins show that optical switching depends on 2 factors: (i) the relative occupancy of the binding pocket in the 2 photoisomers of MAG and (ii) the degree of clamshell closure that is possible given the disposition of the MAG linker. A synthesized short version of MAG turns the channel on in either the cis or trans state, depending on the point of attachment. This yin/yang optical control makes it possible for 1 wavelength of light to elicit action potentials in one set of neurons, while deexciting a second set of neurons in the same preparation, whereas a second wavelength has the opposite effect. The ability to generate opposite responses with a single PTL and 2 versions of a target channel, which can be expressed in different cell types, paves the way for engineering opponency in neurons that mediate opposing functions.


Subject(s)
Light , Nanotechnology/methods , Receptors, Glutamate/metabolism , Animals , Azo Compounds/metabolism , Cell Line , Computer Simulation , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Humans , Ion Channel Gating , Ligands , Maleimides/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Neurons/metabolism , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Protein Conformation , Quinoxalines , Rats , Receptors, Glutamate/chemistry , Stereoisomerism , Titrimetry
14.
Lab Chip ; 22(4): 747-756, 2022 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35044407

ABSTRACT

Microelectrode technology is essential in electrophysiology and has made contributions to neuroscience as well as to medical applications. However, it is necessary to minimize tissue damage associated with needle-like electrode on the brain tissue and the implantation surgery, which makes stable chronic recording impossible. Here, we report on an approach for using a 5 µm-diameter needle electrode, which enables the following of tissue motions, via a surgical method. The electrode is placed on the brain tissue of a mouse with a dissolvable material, reducing the physical stress to the tissue; this is followed by the implantation of the electrode device in the brain without fixing it to the cranium, achieving a floating electrode architecture on the tissue. The electrode shows stable recording with no significant degradation of the signal-to-noise ratios for 6 months, and minimized tissue damage is confirmed compared to that when using a cranium-fixed electrode with the same needle geometry.


Subject(s)
Brain , Neurons , Animals , Brain/physiology , Electrodes, Implanted , Mice , Microelectrodes , Neurons/physiology , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
15.
FEBS Open Bio ; 12(4): 835-851, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35293154

ABSTRACT

Genetic modification to restore cell functions in the brain can be performed through the delivery of biomolecules in a minimally invasive manner into live neuronal cells within brain tissues. However, conventional nanoscale needles are too short (lengths of ~10 µm) to target neuronal cells in ~1-mm-thick brain tissues because the neuronal cells are located deep within the tissue. Here, we report the use of nanoscale-tipped wire (NTW) arrays with diameters < 100 nm and wire lengths of ~200 µm to address biomolecule delivery issues. The NTW arrays were manufactured by growth of silicon microwire arrays and nanotip formation. This technique uses pinpoint, multiple-cell DNA injections in deep areas of brain tissues, enabling target cells to be marked by fluorescent protein (FP) expression vectors. This technique has potential for use for electrophysiological recordings and biological transfection into neuronal cells. Herein, simply pressing an NTW array delivers and expresses plasmid DNA in multiple-cultured cells and multiple-neuronal cells within a brain slice with reduced cell damage. Additionally, DNA transfection is demonstrated using brain cells ex vivo and in vivo. Moreover, knockdown of a critical clock gene after injecting a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) and a genome-editing vector demonstrates the potential to genetically alter the function of living brain cells, for example, pacemaker cells of the mammalian circadian rhythms. Overall, our NTW array injection technique enables genetic and functional modification of living cells in deep brain tissue areas, both ex vivo and in vivo.


Subject(s)
Brain , DNA , Animals , Brain/metabolism , Mammals/genetics , Neurons , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Transfection
16.
ACS Nano ; 16(7): 10692-10700, 2022 07 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35786946

ABSTRACT

Microscale needle-like electrode technologies offer in vivo extracellular recording with a high spatiotemporal resolution. Further miniaturization of needles to nanoscale minimizes tissue injuries; however, a reduced electrode area increases electrical impedance that degrades the quality of neuronal signal recording. We overcome this limitation by fabricating a 300 nm tip diameter and 200 µm long needle electrode where the amplitude gain with a high-impedance electrode (>15 MΩ, 1 kHz) was improved from 0.54 (-5.4 dB) to 0.89 (-1.0 dB) by stacking it on an amplifier module of source follower. The nanoelectrode provided the recording of both local field potential (<300 Hz) and action potential (>500 Hz) in the mouse cortex, in contrast to the electrode without the amplifier. These results suggest that microelectrodes can be further minimized by the proposed amplifier configuration for low-invasive recording and electrophysiological studies in submicron areas in tissues, such as dendrites and axons.


Subject(s)
Amplifiers, Electronic , Neurons , Animals , Mice , Action Potentials/physiology , Electrophysiology/methods , Microelectrodes , Neurons/physiology
17.
Neuron ; 54(4): 535-45, 2007 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17521567

ABSTRACT

The ability to stimulate select neurons in isolated tissue and in living animals is important for investigating their role in circuits and behavior. We show that the engineered light-gated ionotropic glutamate receptor (LiGluR), when introduced into neurons, enables remote control of their activity. Trains of action potentials are optimally evoked and extinguished by 380 nm and 500 nm light, respectively, while intermediate wavelengths provide graded control over the amplitude of depolarization. Light pulses of 1-5 ms in duration at approximately 380 nm trigger precisely timed action potentials and EPSP-like responses or can evoke sustained depolarizations that persist for minutes in the dark until extinguished by a short pulse of approximately 500 nm light. When introduced into sensory neurons in zebrafish larvae, activation of LiGluR reversibly blocks the escape response to touch. Our studies show that LiGluR provides robust control over neuronal activity, enabling the dissection and manipulation of neural circuitry in vivo.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Lighting/methods , Neurons/physiology , Receptors, Kainic Acid/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Action Potentials/radiation effects , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Animals, Newborn , Behavior, Animal/radiation effects , Cells, Cultured , Cysteine/genetics , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Electric Stimulation/methods , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials , Hippocampus/cytology , Larva , Leucine/genetics , Mutation , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/radiation effects , Patch-Clamp Techniques/methods , Physical Stimulation/methods , Rats , Receptors, Kainic Acid/genetics , Transfection/methods , Zebrafish , GluK2 Kainate Receptor
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(26): 10865-70, 2007 Jun 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17578923

ABSTRACT

The analysis of cell signaling requires the rapid and selective manipulation of protein function. We have synthesized photoswitches that covalently modify target proteins and reversibly present and withdraw a ligand from its binding site due to photoisomerization of an azobenzene linker. We describe here the properties of a glutamate photoswitch that controls an ion channel in cells. Affinity labeling and geometric constraints ensure that the photoswitch controls only the targeted channel, and enables spatial patterns of light to favor labeling in one location over another. Photoswitching to the activating state places a tethered glutamate at a high (millimolar) effective local concentration near the binding site. The fraction of active channels can be set in an analog manner by altering the photostationary state with different wavelengths. The bistable photoswitch can be turned on with millisecond-long pulses at one wavelength, remain on in the dark for minutes, and turned off with millisecond long pulses at the other wavelength, yielding sustained activation with minimal irradiation. The system provides rapid, reversible remote control of protein function that is selective without orthogonal chemistry.


Subject(s)
Cell-Free System , Ion Channels/metabolism , Light , Receptors, Kainic Acid/metabolism , Binding Sites , Biomedical Research/methods , Models, Biological , Proteins/physiology , Receptors, Kainic Acid/radiation effects
19.
J Biol Rhythms ; 24(1): 55-63, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19150929

ABSTRACT

The mammalian circadian system is orchestrated by a master pacemaker in the brain, but many peripheral tissues also contain independent or quasi-independent circadian oscillators. The adaptive significance of clocks in these structures must lie, in large part, in the phase relationships between the constituent oscillators and their micro- and macroenvironments. To examine the relationship between postnatal development, which is dependent on endogenous programs and maternal/environmental influences, and the phase of circadian oscillators, the authors assessed the circadian phase of pineal, liver, lung, adrenal, and thyroid tissues cultured from Period 1-luciferase (Per1-luc ) rat pups of various postnatal ages. The liver, thyroid, and pineal were rhythmic at birth, but the phases of their Per1-luc expression rhythms shifted remarkably during development. To determine if the timing of the phase shift in each tissue could be the result of changing environmental conditions, the behavior of pups and their mothers was monitored. The circadian phase of the liver shifted from the day to night around postnatal day (P) 22 as the pups nursed less during the light and instead ate solid food during the dark. Furthermore, the phase of Per1-luc expression in liver cultures from nursing neonates could be shifted experimentally from the day to the night by allowing pups access to the dam only during the dark. Peak Per1-luc expression also shifted from midday to early night in thyroid cultures at about P20, concurrent with the shift in eating times. The phase of Per1-luc expression in the pineal gland shifted from day to night coincident with its sympathetic innervation at around P5. Per1-luc expression was rhythmic in adrenal cultures and peaked around the time of lights-off throughout development; however, the amplitude of the rhythm increased at P25. Lung cultures were completely arrhythmic until P12 when the pups began to leave the nest. Taken together, the data suggest that the molecular machinery that generates circadian oscillations matures at different rates in different tissues and that the phase of at least some peripheral organs is malleable and may shift as the organ's function changes during development.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , Circadian Rhythm , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/physiology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Biological Clocks , Female , Homozygote , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Liver/metabolism , Male , Models, Biological , Oscillometry , Period Circadian Proteins , Rats , Suprachiasmatic Nucleus/metabolism , Time Factors
20.
J Vet Med Sci ; 82(1): 14-22, 2020 Jan 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31776296

ABSTRACT

Instrument cost is a major problem for the transduction of DNA fragments and proteins into cells. Water-in-oil droplet electroporation (droplet-EP) was recently invented as a low-cost and effective method for the transfection of plasmids into cultured human cells. We here applied droplet-EP to livestock animal cells. Although it is difficult to transfect plasmids into bovine fibroblasts using conventional lipofection methods, droplet-EP enabled us to introduce an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-expressing plasmid into bovine earlobe fibroblasts. The optimal transfection condition was 3.0 kV, which allowed 19.1% of the cells to be transfected. For swine earlobe fibroblasts, the maximum transfection efficacy was 14.0% at 4.0 kV. After transfection with droplet-EP, 69.1% of bovine and 76.5% of swine cells were viable. Furthermore, droplet-EP successfully transduced Escherichia coli recombinant EGFP into frozen-thawed bovine sperm at 1.5 kV. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that 71.5% of spermatozoa exhibited green fluorescence after transfection. Overall, droplet-EP is suitable for the transfection of plasmids and proteins into cultured livestock animal cells.


Subject(s)
Electroporation/veterinary , Plasmids , Spermatozoa , Transfection/veterinary , Animals , Cattle , Cells, Cultured , Electroporation/methods , Fibroblasts , Green Fluorescent Proteins , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Recombinant Proteins , Swine , Transfection/methods
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