Neuronal firing modulation by a membranetargeted photoswitch
Metadatos
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DiFrancesco, Mattia Lorenzo; Lodola, Francesco; Colombo, ELisabetta; Maragliano, Luca; Bramini, Mattia; Paternò, Giuseppe Maria; Baldelli, Pietro; Dalla Serra, Mauro; Lunelli, Lorenzo; Marchioretto, Marta; Grasselli, Giorgio; Cimò, Simone; Colella, Letizia; Fazzi, Daniele; Ortica, Fausto; Vurro, Vito; Eleftheriou, Cyril Giles; Shmal, Dmytro; Maya-Vetencourt, José Fernando; Bertarelli, Chiara; Lanzani, Guglielmo; Benfenati, FabioEditorial
Nature
Fecha
2020-02-03Referencia bibliográfica
Neuronal firing modulation by a membrane-targeted photoswitch ML DiFrancesco, F Lodola, E Colombo, L Maragliano, M Bramini, ... 2020, Nature Nanotechnology 15 (4), 296-306
Resumen
Optical technologies allowing modulation of neuronal activity at high spatio-temporal resolution are becoming paramount in neuroscience. In this respect, azobenzene-based photoswitches are promising nanoscale tools for neuronal photostimulation. Here we engineered a light-sensitive azobenzene compound (Ziapin2) that stably partitions into the plasma membrane and causes its thinning through trans-dimerization in the dark, resulting in an increased membrane capacitance at steady state. We demonstrated that in neurons loaded with the compound, millisecond pulses of visible light induce a transient hyperpolarization followed by a delayed depolarization that triggers action potential firing. These effects are persistent and can be evoked in vivo up to 7 days, proving the potential of Ziapin2 for the modulation of membrane capacitance in the millisecond timescale, without directly affecting ion channels or local temperature.





