Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience (May 2019)

Optically Induced Calcium-Dependent Gene Activation and Labeling of Active Neurons Using CaMPARI and Cal-Light

  • Christian Ebner,
  • Christian Ebner,
  • Julia Ledderose,
  • Timothy A. Zolnik,
  • Sina E. Dominiak,
  • Paul Turko,
  • Paul Turko,
  • Athanasia Papoutsi,
  • Panayiota Poirazi,
  • Britta J. Eickholt,
  • Imre Vida,
  • Imre Vida,
  • Matthew E. Larkum,
  • Matthew E. Larkum,
  • Robert N. S. Sachdev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnsyn.2019.00016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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The advent of optogenetic methods has made it possible to use endogeneously produced molecules to image and manipulate cellular, subcellular, and synaptic activity. It has also led to the development of photoactivatable calcium-dependent indicators that mark active synapses, neurons, and circuits. Furthermore, calcium-dependent photoactivation can be used to trigger gene expression in active neurons. Here we describe two sets of protocols, one using CaMPARI and a second one using Cal-Light. CaMPARI, a calcium-modulated photoactivatable ratiometric integrator, enables rapid network-wide, tunable, all-optical functional circuit mapping. Cal-Light, a photoactivatable calcium sensor, while slower to respond than CaMPARI, has the capacity to trigger the expression of genes, including effectors, activators, indicators, or other constructs. Here we describe the rationale and provide procedures for using these two calcium-dependent constructs (1) in vitro in dissociated primary neuronal cell cultures (CaMPARI & Cal-Light); (2) in vitro in acute brain slices for circuit mapping (CaMPARI); (3) in vivo for triggering photoconversion or gene expression (CaMPARI & Cal-Light); and finally, (4) for recovering photoconverted neurons post-fixation with immunocytochemistry (CaMPARI). The approaches and protocols we describe are examples of the potential uses of both CaMPARI & Cal-Light. The ability to mark and manipulate neurons that are active during specific epochs of behavior has a vast unexplored experimental potential.

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