280 7.4 Molecular Cloning
using the energy from the absorption of photons of visible light, as well as other membrane
proteins that act as ion and voltage sensors (Figure 7.2).
For example, bacteriorhodopsin, proteorhodopsin, and archaerhodopsin are all proton
pumps integrated in the cell membranes of either bacteria or archaea. Upon absorption of
blue-green light (the activation wavelengths (λ) span the range ~390–540 nm), they will
pump protons from the cytoplasm to the outside of the cell. Their biological role is to estab
lish a proton motive force across the cell membrane, which is then used to energize the pro
duction of ATP (see Chapter 2).
Similarly, halorhodopsin is a chloride ion pump found in a type of archaea known as
halobacteria that thrive in very salty conditions, whose biological role is to maintain the
osmotic balance of a cell by pumping chloride into their cytoplasm from the outside, energized
by absorption of yellow/green light (typically 540 nm < λ < 590 nm). Channelrhodopsin
(ChR), which is found in the single-celled model alga C. reinhardtii, acts as a pump for a
range of nonspecific positive ions including protons, Na+ and K+ as well as the divalent Ca2+
ion. However, here longer wavelength red light (λ > 590 nm) fuels a pumping action from the
outside of the cell to the cytoplasm inside.
In addition, light-sensitive protein sensors are used, for example, chloride and calcium ion
sensors, as well as membrane voltage sensor protein complexes. Finally, another class of light-
sensitive membrane integrated proteins are used, the most commonly used being the optoXR
type. These undergo conformational changes upon the absorption of light, which triggers
intracellular chemical signaling reactions.
The light-sensitive pumps used in optogenetics have a typical “on time” constant of a
few milliseconds, though this is dependent on the local excitation of laser illumination. The
importance of this is that it is comparable to the electrical conduction time from one end of a
single nerve cell to the other and so in principle allows individual action potential pulses to be
probed. The nervous conduction speed varies with nerve cell type but is roughly in the range
FIGURE 7.2 Optogenetics techniques. Schematic of different classes of light-sensitive opsin
proteins, or luminopsins, made naturally by various single-celled organisms, which can be
introduced into the nerve cells of animals using molecule cloning techniques. These luminopsins
include proton pumps called archeorhodopsins, bacteriorhopsins, and proteorhodopsins that
pump protons across the cell membrane out of the cell due to absorption of typically blue
light (activation wavelength λ1 ~ 390–540 nm), chloride negative ion (anion) pumps called
halorhodopsins that pump chloride ions out of the cell (green/yellow activation wavelength
λ2 ~ 540–590 nm), and nonspecific positive ion (cation) pumps called channelrhodopsins that
pump cations into the cell (red activation wavelength λ3 > 590 nm).