Programmable protein delivery with a bacterial contractile injection systemAbstract Endosymbiotic bacteria have evolved intricate delivery systems that enable these organisms to interface with host biology. One example, the extracellular contractile injection systems (eCISs), are syringe-like macromolecular complexes that inject protein payloads into eukaryotic cells by driving a spike through the cellular membrane. Recently, eCISs have been found to target mouse cells 1–3 , raising the possibility that these systems could be harnessed for therapeutic protein delivery. However, whether eCISs can function in human cells remains unknown, and the mechanism by which these systems recognize target cells is poorly understood. Here we show that target selection by the Photorhabdus virulence cassette (PVC)—an eCIS from the entomopathogenic bacterium Photorhabdus asymbiotica —is mediated by specific recognition of a target receptor by a distal binding element of the PVC tail fibre. Furthermore, using in silico structure-guided engineering of the tail fibre, we show that PVCs can be reprogrammed to target organisms not natively targeted by these systems—including human cells and mice—with efficiencies approaching 100%. Finally, we show that PVCs can load diverse protein payloads, including Cas9, base editors and toxins, and can functionally deliver them into human cells. Our results demonstrate that PVCs are programmable protein delivery devices with possible applications in gene therapy, cancer therapy and biocontrol.
Making Sense of OptogeneticsAkash Guru, Ryan J. Post, Yi-Yun Ho et al.|The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology|2015 This review, one of a series of articles, tries to make sense of optogenetics, a recently developed technology that can be used to control the activity of genetically-defined neurons with light. Cells are first genetically engineered to express a light-sensitive opsin, which is typically an ion channel, pump, or G protein-coupled receptor. When engineered cells are then illuminated with light of the correct frequency, opsin-bound retinal undergoes a conformational change that leads to channel opening or pump activation, cell depolarization or hyperpolarization, and neural activation or silencing. Since the advent of optogenetics, many different opsin variants have been discovered or engineered, and it is now possible to stimulate or inhibit neuronal activity or intracellular signaling pathways on fast or slow timescales with a variety of different wavelengths of light. Optogenetics has been successfully employed to enhance our understanding of the neural circuit dysfunction underlying mood disorders, addiction, and Parkinson's disease, and has enabled us to achieve a better understanding of the neural circuits mediating normal behavior. It has revolutionized the field of neuroscience, and has enabled a new generation of experiments that probe the causal roles of specific neural circuit components.
Intense threat switches dorsal raphe serotonin neurons to a paradoxical operational modeSurvival depends on the selection of behaviors adaptive for the current environment. For example, a mouse should run from a rapidly looming hawk but should freeze if the hawk is coasting across the sky. Although serotonin has been implicated in adaptive behavior, environmental regulation of its functional role remains poorly understood. In mice, we found that stimulation of dorsal raphe serotonin neurons suppressed movement in low- and moderate-threat environments but induced escape behavior in high-threat environments, and that movement-related dorsal raphe serotonin neural dynamics inverted in high-threat environments. Stimulation of dorsal raphe γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurons promoted movement in negative but not positive environments, and movement-related GABA neural dynamics inverted between positive and negative environments. Thus, dorsal raphe circuits switch between distinct operational modes to promote environment-specific adaptive behaviors.
Extracellular vesicles incorporating retrovirus-like capsids for the enhanced packaging and systemic delivery of mRNA into neuronsWenchao Gu, Sijin Luozhong, Simian Cai et al.|Nature Biomedical Engineering|2024 Ramping activity in midbrain dopamine neurons signifies the use of a cognitive mapAkash Guru, Changwoo Seo, Ryan J. Post et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2020 Journeys to novel and familiar destinations employ different navigational strategies. The first drive to a new restaurant relies on map-based planning, but after repeated trips the drive is automatic and guided by local environmental cues 1,2 . Ventral striatal dopamine rises during navigation toward goals and reflects the spatial proximity and value of goals 3 , but the impact of experience, the neural mechanisms, and the functional significance of dopamine ramps are unknown 4,5 . Here, we used fiber photometry 6–8 to record the evolution of activity in midbrain dopamine neurons as mice learned a variety of reward-seeking tasks, starting recordings before training had commenced and continuing daily for weeks. When mice navigated through space toward a goal, robust ramping activity in dopamine neurons appeared immediately – after the first rewarded trial on the first training day in completely naïve animals. In this task spatial cues were available to guide behavior, and although ramps were strong at first, they gradually faded away as training progressed. If instead mice learned to run a fixed distance on a stationary wheel for reward, a task that required an internal model of progress toward the goal, strong dopamine ramps persisted indefinitely. In a passive task in which a visible cue and reward moved together toward the mouse, ramps appeared and then faded over several days, but in an otherwise identical task with a stationary cue and reward ramps never appeared. Our findings provide strong evidence that ramping activity in midbrain dopamine neurons reflects the use of a cognitive map 9,10 – an internal model of the distance already covered and the remaining distance until the goal is reached. We hypothesize that dopamine ramps may be used to reinforce locations on the way to newly-discovered rewards in order to build a graded ventral striatal value landscape for guiding routine spatial behavior.