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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(34): 23963-23971, 2024 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39158696

ABSTRACT

Photoacoustic imaging is an emerging modality with significant promise for biomedical applications such as neuroimaging, owing to its capability to capture large fields of view deep inside complex scattering tissue. However, widespread adoption of this technique has been hindered by a lack of suitable molecular reporters for this modality. In this work, we introduce chemigenetic labels and calcium sensors specifically tailored for photoacoustic imaging, using a combination of synthetic dyes and HaloTag-based self-labeling proteins. We rationally design and engineer far-red "acoustogenic" dyes, showing high photoacoustic turn-ons upon binding to HaloTag, and develop a suite of tunable calcium indicators based on these scaffolds. These first-generation photoacoustic reporters show excellent performance in tissue-mimicking phantoms, with the best variants outperforming existing sensors in terms of signal intensity, sensitivity, and photostability. We demonstrate the application of these ligands for labeling HaloTag-expressing neurons in mouse brain tissue, producing strong, specifically targeted photoacoustic signal, and provide a first example of in vivo labeling with these chemigenetic photoacoustic probes. Together, this work establishes a new approach for the design of photoacoustic reporters, paving the way toward deep tissue functional imaging.


Subject(s)
Calcium , Photoacoustic Techniques , Photoacoustic Techniques/methods , Calcium/chemistry , Animals , Mice , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemical synthesis , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/metabolism , Humans
2.
Curr Biol ; 32(13): R751-R753, 2022 07 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35820388

ABSTRACT

When confronted with illness, humans and animals undergo critical changes in their behavior and physiology. New research shows how neuronal circuits detect sickness and coordinate illness-specific responses.


Subject(s)
Neurosciences , Animals , Brain/physiology , Humans , Inflammation
3.
Neuron ; 109(20): 3283-3297.e11, 2021 10 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34672983

ABSTRACT

Deep brain temperature detection by hypothalamic warm-sensitive neurons (WSNs) has been proposed to provide feedback information relevant for thermoregulation. WSNs increase their action potential firing rates upon warming, a property that has been presumed to rely on the composition of thermosensitive ion channels within WSNs. Here, we describe a synaptic mechanism that regulates temperature sensitivity of preoptic WSNs and body temperature. Experimentally induced warming of the mouse hypothalamic preoptic area in vivo triggers body cooling. TRPM2 ion channels facilitate this homeostatic response and, at the cellular level, enhance temperature responses of WSNs, thereby linking WSN function with thermoregulation for the first time. Rather than acting within WSNs, we-unexpectedly-find TRPM2 to temperature-dependently increase synaptic drive onto WSNs by disinhibition. Our data emphasize a network-based interoceptive paradigm that likely plays a key role in encoding body temperature and that may facilitate integration of diverse inputs into thermoregulatory pathways.


Subject(s)
Body Temperature Regulation/genetics , Neural Inhibition/genetics , Neurons/metabolism , Preoptic Area/metabolism , TRPM Cation Channels/genetics , Thermosensing/genetics , Animals , Body Temperature , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Interoception/physiology , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Preoptic Area/cytology , Synapses , TRPM Cation Channels/metabolism
4.
Pflugers Arch ; 470(5): 809-822, 2018 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29374307

ABSTRACT

Temperature affects all aspects of life down to the diffusion rates of biologically active molecules and reaction rates of enzymes. The reciprocal argument holds true as well and every biological process down to enzymatic reactions influences temperature. In order to assure biological stability, mammalian organisms possess the remarkable ability to maintain internal body temperature within a narrow range, which in humans and mice is close to 37 °C, despite wide environmental temperature variations and different rates of internal heat production. Nevertheless, body temperature is not a static property but adaptively regulated upon physiological demands and in the context of pathological conditions. The brain region that has been primarily associated with internal temperature regulation is the preoptic area and the anterior portion of the hypothalamus. Similar to a thermostat, this brain area detects deep brain temperature, integrates temperature information from peripheral body sensors, and-based on these inputs--controls body temperature homeostasis. Discovered more than a century ago, we still know comparatively little about the molecular and cellular make-up of the hypothalamic thermoregulatory center. After a brief historic outline that led to the discovery of the thermoregulatory center, we here review recent studies that have considerably advanced our understanding of hypothalamic thermoregulation. We touch upon proposed mechanisms of intrinsic deep brain temperature detection and focus on newly identified hypothalamic cell populations that mediate thermoregulatory responses and that provide novel entry points not only to shed light on the mechanistic underpinnings of the thermoregulatory center but also to probe its therapeutic value.


Subject(s)
Hypothalamus/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Thermogenesis , Thermosensing , Adipose Tissue, Brown/metabolism , Adipose Tissue, Brown/physiology , Animals , Energy Metabolism , Humans , Hypothalamus/cytology , Medulla Oblongata/cytology , Medulla Oblongata/physiology , Synaptic Transmission
6.
Science ; 353(6306): 1393-1398, 2016 09 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27562954

ABSTRACT

Body temperature homeostasis is critical for survival and requires precise regulation by the nervous system. The hypothalamus serves as the principal thermostat that detects and regulates internal temperature. We demonstrate that the ion channel TRPM2 [of the transient receptor potential (TRP) channel family] is a temperature sensor in a subpopulation of hypothalamic neurons. TRPM2 limits the fever response and may detect increased temperatures to prevent overheating. Furthermore, chemogenetic activation and inhibition of hypothalamic TRPM2-expressing neurons in vivo decreased and increased body temperature, respectively. Such manipulation may allow analysis of the beneficial effects of altered body temperature on diverse disease states. Identification of a functional role for TRP channels in monitoring internal body temperature should promote further analysis of molecular mechanisms governing thermoregulation and foster the genetic dissection of hypothalamic circuits involved with temperature homeostasis.


Subject(s)
Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Fever/physiopathology , Hot Temperature , Hypothermia/physiopathology , Preoptic Area/physiology , TRPM Cation Channels/physiology , Animals , Body Temperature Regulation/genetics , Female , Fever/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Mutant Strains , Neurons/physiology , Preoptic Area/cytology , TRPM Cation Channels/genetics
7.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 368(1632): 20130019, 2013 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24218632

ABSTRACT

The developmental brain gene NPAS3 stands out as a hot spot in human evolution because it contains the largest number of human-specific, fast-evolving, conserved, non-coding elements. In this paper we studied 2xHAR142, one of these elements that is located in the fifth intron of NPAS3. Using transgenic mice, we show that the mouse and chimp 2xHAR142 orthologues behave as transcriptional enhancers driving expression of the reporter gene lacZ to a similar NPAS3 expression subdomain in the mouse central nervous system. Interestingly, the human 2xHAR142 orthologue drives lacZ expression to an extended expression pattern in the nervous system. Thus, molecular evolution of 2xHAR142 provides the first documented example of human-specific heterotopy in the forebrain promoted by a transcriptional enhancer and suggests that it may have contributed to assemble the unique properties of the human brain.


Subject(s)
Enhancer Elements, Genetic/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Expression Regulation/genetics , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Prosencephalon/metabolism , Transcription Factors/genetics , Animals , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors , Computational Biology , Conserved Sequence/genetics , DNA Primers/genetics , Galactosides , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , In Situ Hybridization , Indoles , Lac Operon/genetics , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Nerve Tissue Proteins/metabolism , Pan troglodytes/genetics , Short Interspersed Nucleotide Elements/genetics , Species Specificity , Transcription Factors/metabolism
8.
Mol Biol Evol ; 30(5): 1088-102, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23408798

ABSTRACT

To identify the evolutionary genetic novelties that contributed to shape human-specific traits such as the use of a complex language, long-term planning and exceptional learning abilities is one of the ultimate frontiers of modern biology. Evolutionary signatures of functional shifts could be detected by comparing noncoding regions that are highly conserved across mammals or primates and rapidly accumulated nucleotide substitutions only in the lineage leading to humans. As gene loci densely populated with human-accelerated elements (HAEs) are more likely to have contributed to human-specific novelties, we sought to identify the transcriptional units and genomic 1 Mb intervals of the entire human genome carrying the highest number of HAEs. To this end, we took advantage of four available data sets of human genomic accelerated regions obtained through different comparisons and algorithms and performed a meta-analysis of the combined data. We found that the brain developmental transcription factor neuronal PAS domain-containing protein 3 (NPAS3) contains the largest cluster of noncoding-accelerated regions in the human genome with up to 14 elements that are highly conserved in mammals, including primates, but carry human-specific nucleotide substitutions. We then tested the ability of the 14 HAEs identified at the NPAS3 locus to act as transcriptional regulatory sequences in a reporter expression assay performed in transgenic zebrafish. We found that 11 out of the 14 HAEs present in NPAS3 act as transcriptional enhancers during development, particularly within the nervous system. As NPAS3 is known to play a crucial role during mammalian brain development, our results indicate that the high density of HAEs present in the human NPAS3 locus could have modified the spatiotemporal expression pattern of NPAS3 in the developing human brain and, therefore, contributed to human brain evolution.


Subject(s)
Brain/metabolism , Genome, Human/genetics , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics , Transcription Factors/genetics , Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors , Humans
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