Publications
Nature communicationsJul 2024 |
15
(
1
),
5551
DOI:
10.1038/s41467-024-49442-3

A chemogenetic approach for dopamine imaging with tunable sensitivity

Labouesse, Marie A; Wilhelm, Maria; Kagiampaki, Zacharoula; Yee, Andrew G; Denis, Raphaelle; Harada, Masaya; Gresch, Andrea; Marinescu, Alina-Măriuca; Otomo, Kanako; Curreli, Sebastiano; Serratosa Capdevila, Laia; Zhou, Xuehan; Cola, Reto B; Ravotto, Luca; Glück, Chaim; Cherepanov, Stanislav; Weber, Bruno; Zhou, Xin; Katner, Jason; Svensson, Kjell A; Fellin, Tommaso; Trudeau, Louis-Eric; Ford, Christopher P; Sych, Yaroslav; Patriarchi, Tommaso
Product Used
Genes
Abstract
Genetically-encoded dopamine (DA) sensors enable high-resolution imaging of DA release, but their ability to detect a wide range of extracellular DA levels, especially tonic versus phasic DA release, is limited by their intrinsic affinity. Here we show that a human-selective dopamine receptor positive allosteric modulator (PAM) can be used to boost sensor affinity on-demand. The PAM enhances DA detection sensitivity across experimental preparations (in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo) via one-photon or two-photon imaging. In vivo photometry-based detection of optogenetically-evoked DA release revealed that DETQ administration produces a stable 31 minutes window of potentiation without effects on animal behavior. The use of the PAM revealed region-specific and metabolic state-dependent differences in tonic DA levels and enhanced single-trial detection of behavior-evoked phasic DA release in cortex and striatum. Our chemogenetic strategy can potently and flexibly tune DA imaging sensitivity and reveal multi-modal (tonic/phasic) DA signaling across preparations and imaging approaches.
Product Used
Genes

Related Publications