Visual function restoration with a highly sensitive and fast Channelrhodopsin in blind mice

  • Fei Chen
  • Xiaodong Duan
  • Yao Yu
  • Shang Yang
  • Yuanyuan Chen
  • Christine E Gee
  • Georg Nagel
  • Kang Zhang
  • Shiqiang Gao
  • Yin Shen

Related Research units

Abstract

Inherited and age-related retinal degenerative diseases cause progressive loss of photoreceptors, ultimately leading to blindness. Optogenetics is a promising strategy for restoring visual function through photosensitive proteins’ ectopic expression in surviving retinal neurons. Very recently, the optogenetic method with a red-shifted Channelrhodopsin was clinically applied for partial recovery of visual function in a blind patient. However, major obstacles to achieving optimal optogenetic vision restoration are either the low light sensitivity or the slow kinetics of existing rhodopsin-based optogenetic tools, which can be improved by molecular engineering to enhance the efficacy of fast Channelrhodopsins (ChRs). Here, we present a newly engineered ChR variant PsCatCh2.0, engineered from PsChR, which displays inherently high Ca2+ and Na+ conductance and fast kinetics.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number104
ISSN2059-3635
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18.04.2022
PubMed 35430811