ORCID Profile
0000-0003-1527-607X
Current Organisation
University of Oxford
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Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Date: 27-03-2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.03.26.437160
Abstract: Photoswitchable reagents to modulate microtubule stability and dynamics are an exciting tool approach towards micron- and millisecond-scale control over endogenous cytoskeleton-dependent processes. When these reagents are globally administered yet locally photoactivated in 2D cell culture, they can exert precise biological control that would have great potential for in vivo translation across a variety of research fields and for all eukaryotes. However, photopharmacology’s reliance on the azobenzene photoswitch scaffold has been accompanied by a failure to translate this temporally- and cellularly-resolved control to 3D models or to in vivo applications in multi-organ animals, which we attribute substantially to the metabolic liabilities of azobenzenes. Here, we optimised the potency and solubility of metabolically stable, druglike colchicinoid microtubule inhibitors based instead on the styrylbenzothiazole (SBT) photoswitch scaffold, that are non-responsive to the major fluorescent protein imaging channels and so enable multiplexed imaging studies. We applied these reagents to 3D systems (organoids, tissue explants) and classic model organisms (zebrafish, clawed frog) with one- and two-protein imaging experiments. We successfully used systemic treatment plus spatiotemporally-localised illuminations in vivo to photocontrol microtubule dynamics, network architecture, and microtubule-dependent processes in these systems with cellular precision and second-level resolution. These nanomolar, in vivo -capable photoswitchable reagents can prove a game-changer for high-precision cytoskeleton research in cargo transport, cell motility, cell ision and development. More broadly, their straightforward design can also inspire the development of similarly capable optical reagents for a range of protein targets, so bringing general in vivo photopharmacology one step closer to productive realisation.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 05-05-2023
DOI: 10.1038/S42003-023-04779-1
Abstract: Microtubules are key to multiple neuronal functions involving the transport of organelles, however, their relationship to neurotransmitter release is still unresolved. Here, we show that microtubules present in the presynaptic compartment of cholinergic autaptic synapses are dynamic. To investigate how the balance between microtubule growth and shrinkage affects neurotransmission we induced synchronous microtubule depolymerization by photoactivation of the chemical inhibitor SBTub3. The consequence was an increase in spontaneous neurotransmitter release. An analogous effect was obtained by dialyzing the cytosol with Kif18A, a plus-end-directed kinesin with microtubule depolymerizing activity. Kif18A also inhibited the refilling of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles during high frequency stimulation. The action of Kif18A was associated to one order of magnitude increases in the numbers of exo-endocytic pits and endosomes present in the presynaptic terminal. An enhancement of spontaneous neurotransmitter release was also observed when neurons were dialyzed with stathmin-1, a protein with a widespread presence in the nervous system that induces microtubule depolymerization. Taken together, these results support that microtubules restrict spontaneous neurotransmitter release as well as promote the replenishment of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles.
Publisher: American Chemical Society (ACS)
Date: 15-03-2022
DOI: 10.1021/JACS.2C01020
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
No related grants have been discovered for Cecilia Velasco Dominguez.