A Genetically Encoded Fluorescent Sensor Enables Rapid and Specific Detection of Dopamine in Flies, Fish, and Mice

一种基因编码荧光传感器能够快速、特异性地检测苍蝇、鱼和老鼠体内的多巴胺

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作者:Fangmiao Sun, Jianzhi Zeng, Miao Jing, Jingheng Zhou, Jiesi Feng, Scott F Owen, Yichen Luo, Funing Li, Huan Wang, Takashi Yamaguchi, Zihao Yong, Yijing Gao, Wanling Peng, Lizhao Wang, Siyu Zhang, Jiulin Du, Dayu Lin, Min Xu, Anatol C Kreitzer, Guohong Cui, Yulong Li

Abstract

Dopamine (DA) is a central monoamine neurotransmitter involved in many physiological and pathological processes. A longstanding yet largely unmet goal is to measure DA changes reliably and specifically with high spatiotemporal precision, particularly in animals executing complex behaviors. Here, we report the development of genetically encoded GPCR-activation-based-DA (GRABDA) sensors that enable these measurements. In response to extracellular DA, GRABDA sensors exhibit large fluorescence increases (ΔF/F0 ∼90%) with subcellular resolution, subsecond kinetics, nanomolar to submicromolar affinities, and excellent molecular specificity. GRABDA sensors can resolve a single-electrical-stimulus-evoked DA release in mouse brain slices and detect endogenous DA release in living flies, fish, and mice. In freely behaving mice, GRABDA sensors readily report optogenetically elicited nigrostriatal DA release and depict dynamic mesoaccumbens DA signaling during Pavlovian conditioning or during sexual behaviors. Thus, GRABDA sensors enable spatiotemporally precise measurements of DA dynamics in a variety of model organisms while exhibiting complex behaviors.

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