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© Research
Publication : Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences

Monitoring of chloride and activity of glycine receptor channels using genetically encoded fluorescent sensors

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences - 13 Oct 2008

Mukhtarov M, Markova O, Real E, Jacob Y, Buldakova S, Bregestovski P

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 18632458

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci 2008 Oct;366(1880):3445-62

Genetically encoded probes have become powerful tools for non-invasive monitoring of ions, distributions of proteins and the migration and formation of cellular components. We describe the functional expression of two molecular probes for non-invasive fluorescent monitoring of intracellular Cl ([Cl]i) and the functioning of glycine receptor (GlyR) channels. The first probe is a recently developed cyan fluorescent protein-yellow fluorescent protein-based construct, termed Cl-Sensor, with relatively high sensitivity to Cl (Kapp approximately 30 mM). In this study, we describe its expression in retina cells using in vivo electroporation and analyse changes in [Cl]i at depolarization and during the first three weeks of post-natal development. An application of 40 mM K+ causes an elevation in [Cl]i of approximately 40 mM. In photoreceptors from retina slices of a 6-day-old rat (P6 rat), the mean [Cl]i is approximately 50 mM, and for P16 and P21 rats it is approximately 30-35 mM. The second construct, termed BioSensor-GlyR, is a GlyR channel with Cl-Sensor incorporated into the cytoplasmic domain. This is the first molecular probe for spectroscopic monitoring of the functioning of receptor-operated channels. These types of probes offer a means of screening pharmacological agents and monitoring Cl under different physiological and pathological conditions and permit spectroscopic monitoring of the activity of GlyRs expressed in heterologous systems and neurons.