Optogenetic tools have implications for regenerative medicine

May 4, 2018
The optogenetic tools could enable real-time activation of target genes in specific locations in the genome.

Researchers at Texas A&M University (College Station, TX) are developing optogenetic tools that could enable real-time activation of target genes in specific locations in the genome. This technology may help scientists to illuminate the gene function during different biological processes, which could be useful in regenerative medicine. Calcium plays an important role in this system, as its signals regulate a number of activities within the cell, from growth and metabolism to homeostasis.

Related: Low-level light stirs in vivo stem cells to regenerate tissue

Yubin Zhou, Ph.D., associate professor at the Texas A&M Institute of Biosciences and Technology, is leading development of the calcium-responsive transcriptional reprogramming tool (dubbed CaRROT). This system can control the transcription of genes within the body with high precision—it can dictate how, when, and where genes create proteins that perform various cellular functions. CaRROT uses a pulse of light or chemicals that can induce the flow of calcium ions into cells, which Zhou says should allow scientists to turn on or off a diverse array of genes at any location by switching the light or adding or withdrawing activating compounds.

The researchers designed CaRROT to hijack the calcium signals generated by light (with Opto-CRAC, another technology Zhou and his team developed) to deliver the genome-engineering tool derived from the CRISPR/Cas9 system to turn on genes. "When the light is switched on, the gates controlling calcium ions open to allow the flow of calcium from the external space into the cytoplasm of the cell," says Nhung Nguyen, a graduate student in Zhou's lab who led the work. "This process ultimately turns on the expression of specific genes," she says, which then leads to changes in the function of the cell.

"We have screened dozens of engineered proteins and undergone numerous rounds of optimization to make the CaRROT system strictly responsive to light," adds Lian He, Ph.D., a graduate student in Zhou's lab and a co-first author of the study. To evaluate how effective CaRROT is in mammalian cells, the team will test it on genes that control the differentiation of neuron and skeletal muscle. They hope that they can use CaRROT in regenerative medicine to drive the precise differentiation of stem cells into whatever type of organ is required, just by illuminating the cells with light.

"The improvement of light penetration in deep tissue gives us the optimism that we could use CaRROT to reprogram cells in damaged organs," says Yun Huang, Ph.D., a collaborative senior author of the study. "It is possible that one day, by just exposing the tissues to light, we can heal the wound or accelerate the regeneration of injured tissues by phototuning coordinated gene expression."

In a second study, Zhou and his team invented a new optogenetic tool that can do the opposite trick. With light shining upon cells in the 'excitable' tissues such as the nervous and cardiovascular systems, calcium influx through gateways on the membrane of the cell, called voltage-gated calcium channels, can be turned off. These channels, which constitute the major route of calcium entry into the cell, regulate a series of physiological processes. Because their dysfunction is involved in many diseases, they are considered an important therapeutic target for cardiovascular and neuropsychiatric disorders.

Traditional calcium-channel blockers approved by the U.S. FDA have been widely used to treat cardiovascular disorders, including high blood pressure, arrhythmia, and coronary artery disease. However, these drugs tend to cause side effects—including headache, edema, dangerously low blood pressure, and palpitations—because of their cytotoxicity and off-target effects. Recognizing this, the research team's optogenetic tool provides a non-conventional method to interrogate physiological and pathophysiological processes medicated by these voltage-gated calcium channels, Zhou says.

Zhou and his collaborators combined genetic strategies with optical techniques to engineer a novel class of genetically encoded inhibitors for these voltage-gated calcium channels. "After tremendous efforts of optimization, we developed an ideal photoswitchable inhibitor, which we’re calling optoRGK. OptoRGK exhibited excellent light-inducible inhibition of calcium ion entry in excitable cells," says Guolin Ma, Ph.D., an assistant project scientist in Zhou's lab, who spearheaded the project.

The team tested this tool in cardiac muscle cells, which showed rhythmic oscillations of calcium in the dark that matched the heart-beating rhythm. "However, upon blue light illumination, the rhythmic oscillations can be substantially reduced or even terminated," Zhou says. "Notably, this process is totally reversible after removal of the light source."

With this method, researchers can regulate the activity of excitable cells in the nervous and cardiovascular systems. "Complementary to the photoactivatable Opto-CRAC system, the optoRGK toolkit provides a unique opportunity to switch off calcium signals in excitable cells," says Youjun Wang, Ph.D., a collaborator of this study from Beijing Normal University (China).

"Our novel optogenetic tools can be conveniently applied to control a wide range of physiological processes mediated by voltage-gated calcium channels in multiple biological systems," Zhou adds. "While traditional voltage-gated calcium channel blockers lack reversibility, selectivity and tissue-specificity, optoRGK opens exciting opportunities to intervene in related physiological processes with unprecedented precision. We hope that these kinds of studies will eventually lead to new generation of optogenetic devices for curing cancer, cardiovascular, and neurological diseases."

Full details of the work appear in the journals ACS Synthetic Biology and Angewandte Chemie.

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BioOptics World Editors

We edited the content of this article, which was contributed by outside sources, to fit our style and substance requirements. (Editor’s Note: BioOptics World has folded as a brand and is now part of Laser Focus World, effective in 2022.)

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