Publication | Open Access
Development of Anionically Decorated Caged Neurotransmitters: In Vitro Comparison of 7‐Nitroindolinyl‐ and 2‐(<i>p</i>‐Phenyl‐<i>o</i>‐nitrophenyl)propyl‐Based Photochemical Probes
25
Citations
47
References
2016
Year
Synaptic TransmissionNeurotransmitterNeurotransmissionSynaptic SignalingSocial SciencesUncaging CurrentsMolecular PharmacologyNeurochemistryPhotophysical PropertyBiophysicsMolecular NeuroscienceNeurotransmitter UncagingBiochemistryPhotochemistryCaged Glutamate ProbesMechanistic PhotochemistryNeurotransmitter ReceptorsNeuropharmacologyPharmacologyPhotochemical ProbesAnionically DecoratedInhibitory NeurotransmittersSynaptic PlasticityCellular NeuroscienceVitro ComparisonMolecular NeurobiologyChemical ProbeMedicineSmall Molecules
Neurotransmitter uncaging, especially that of glutamate, has been used to study synaptic function for over 30 years. One limitation of caged glutamate probes is the blockade of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-A receptor function. This problem comes to the fore when the probes are applied at the high concentrations required for effective two-photon photolysis. To mitigate such problems one could improve the photochemical properties of caging chromophores and/or remove receptor blockade. We show that addition of a dicarboxylate unit to the widely used 4-methoxy-7-nitroindolinyl-Glu (MNI-Glu) system reduced the off-target effects by about 50-70 %. When the same strategy was applied to an electron-rich 2-(p-Phenyl-o-nitrophenyl)propyl (PNPP) caging group, the pharmacological improvements were not as significant as in the MNI case. Finally, we used very extensive biological testing of the PNPP-caged Glu (more than 250 uncaging currents at single dendritic spines) to show that nitro-biphenyl caging chromophores have two-photon uncaging efficacies similar to that of MNI-Glu.
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