Electrophysiological Mechanisms and Validation of Ferritin-Based Magnetogenetics for Remote Control of Neurons
Abstract
Magnetogenetics was developed to remotely control genetically targeted neurons. A variant of magnetogenetics uses magnetic fi elds to activate transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) channels when coupled with ferritin. Stimulation with static or RF magnetic fi elds of neurons expressing these channels induces Ca2+ 2+ transients and modulates behavior. However, the validity of ferritin-based magnetogenetics has been questioned due to controversies surrounding the underlying mechanisms and deficits fi cits in reproducibility. Here, we validated the magnetogenetic approach Ferritin-iron Redistribution to Ion Channels (FeRIC) using electrophysiological (Ephys) and imaging techniques. Previously, interference from RF stimulation rendered patch-clamp recordings inaccessible for magnetogenetics. We solved this limitation for FeRIC, and we studied the bioelectrical properties of neurons expressing TRPV4 (nonselective cation channel) and transmembrane member 16A (TMEM16A; chloride-permeable channel) coupled to ferritin (FeRIC channels) under RF stimulation. We used cultured neurons obtained from the rat hippocampus of either sex. We show that RF decreases the membrane resistance (Rm) and depolarizes the membrane potential in neurons expressing TRPV4FeRIC. FeRIC . RF does not directly trigger action potential fi ring but increases the neuronal basal spiking frequency. In neurons expressing TMEM16AFeRIC, FeRIC , RF decreases the Rm, hyperpolarizes the membrane potential, and decreases the spiking frequency. Additionally, we corroborated the previously described biochemical mechanism responsible for RF-induced activation of ferritincoupled ion channels. We solved an enduring problem for ferritin-based magnetogenetics, obtaining direct Ephys evidence of RF-induced activation of ferritin-coupled ion channels. We found that RF does not yield instantaneous changes in neuronal membrane potentials. Instead, RF produces responses that are long-lasting and moderate, but effective in controlling the bioelectrical properties of neurons.
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Título según WOS: | ID WOS:001285434500002 Not found in local WOS DB |
Título de la Revista: | JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE |
Volumen: | 44 |
Número: | 30 |
Editorial: | SOC NEUROSCIENCE |
Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
DOI: |
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1717-23.2024 |
Notas: | ISI |