Acheiving instantaneous control of G-protein coupled receptors using light as a ligand
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Manchester
Department Name: Life Sciences
Abstract
The discovery and development of drugs that can influence human behaviour and physiology has played a crucial role in the huge advances in medicine that have occurred over the last century. However, future progress is likely to depend in large part upon our ability to overcome some of the inherent limitations in this pharmaceutical method for treating disease. A well known problem with using drugs is that of side effects, which occur because drugs commonly have effects on multiple parts of the body. Many otherwise effective drugs are lost because of the need to minimise such adverse effects. An additional problem with drugs is that, in comparison with the natural changes in our physiology that they hope to regulate, their effects build up rather slowly and can hang around for a long time. This contributes to our tendency to become desensitised to drugs and also stops them being used in conditions in which we would like more immediate and reversible effects. For these reasons, there is a pressing need to develop new ways of adjusting our physiology that go beyond the achievements of pharmacy. We propose developing such a technology. Our approach will be to modify a group of proteins called GPCRs to make them light sensitive. GPCRs appear in practically every cell of our body. Their job is to fine tune the cell?s activity and physiology according to signals released from neighbouring cells and other parts of the body. Because they are so influential they have long been recognised as a good way of treating the symptoms of disease. Indeed more than half of currently prescribed drugs are designed to alter their activity. By making GPCRs photosensitive, we will be able to use light rather than drugs to tweak their activity. Unlike drugs, light can be switched on and off very rapidly. Light can also be applied at high doses to a single group of cells without influencing the rest of the body. These features mean that we will be able to use the new GPCRs to achieve extremely fine tuned alterations in physiology way beyond what is currently possible using drugs. In the first instance we will use this technology in animal experiments that increase our knowledge of how common medical conditions (including obesity, depression and insomnia) come about. In time, it will become a completely new way of treating medical conditions.
Technical Summary
The development and exploitation of new technologies have underpinned numerous great advances in biomedicine. A rich source of such enabling technology has been the translation of conceptual breakthroughs in one field of research into technical innovations in another. Here we propose adopting this strategy by exploiting recent discoveries in the field of photobiology to obtain a previously unimagineable level of control over the activity of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs). GPCRs are a hugely influential family of proteins. They underpin intercellular communication in all major body systems by modulating second messenger systems according to the appearance of signalling molecules at the cell surface. GPCRs are therapeutic targets in a very wide variety of clinical conditions ranging from neuropsychiatric disorders to endocrine imbalances, and chronic/acute pain. Our previous work has focussed on the opsins, a branch of the GPCR family that are naturally photosensitive and provide the basis for vision. We have recently discovered that some opsins can attain photosensitivity using a cofactor (all-trans retinaldehyde) that is found throughout the body. This feature enables them to be photosensitive even when expressed outside of the retina. We propose using this information in a new strategy to achieve remote and instantaneous control of GPCR signalling. We will engineer synthetic GPCRs that comprise the light-absorbing structures of these opsins fused to the intracellular signalling components of other GPCRs. When expressed in cells of interest these photosensitised GPCRs will recapitulate native signalling upon photic stimulation. As light can be applied with very high temporal and spatial resolution this technology will allow the activity of specific GPCRs to be controlled in particular tissues (or even single cells) with microsecond resolution. Genetic control over the expression of photosensitised GPCRs will further restrict light responses to individual cell types. This unprecedented level of control will make it possible to artificially recreate natural patterns of GPCR activity for the first time. This technological advance will enable a quantum leap in cell and animal-based studies exploring the contribution of individual GPCRs to complex physiological systems, and in the development of new animal models of human disease. In the longer term, gene transfer techniques will allow this technology to be applied to clinical treatments. Given the ability of GPCRs to influence all major body systems and the inherent advantages of obtaining instantaneous control of their activity, the clinical prospects for such an approach are almost limitless.
Publications

Bailes HJ
(2012)
Reproducible and sustained regulation of Gas signalling using a metazoan opsin as an optogenetic tool.
in PloS one


Bailes HJ
(2013)
Human melanopsin forms a pigment maximally sensitive to blue light (?max ˜ 479 nm) supporting activation of G(q/11) and G(i/o) signalling cascades.
in Proceedings. Biological sciences

Ballister ER
(2018)
A live cell assay of GPCR coupling allows identification of optogenetic tools for controlling Go and Gi signaling.
in BMC biology

Cheng A
(2014)
Cartilage repair using human embryonic stem cell-derived chondroprogenitors.
in Stem cells translational medicine

Gerrard E
(2018)
Convergent evolution of tertiary structure in rhodopsin visual proteins from vertebrates and box jellyfish.
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Johnson J
(2017)
Ethanol Stimulates Locomotion via a Gas-Signaling Pathway in IL2 Neurons in Caenorhabditis elegans
in Genetics
Description | We have deposited a vector with a new optogenetic tool (JellyOp) with AdGene. This has been requested by numerous researchers around the world. |
First Year Of Impact | 2012 |
Sector | Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology |
Description | Program Grant |
Amount | $1,050,000 (USD) |
Funding ID | RGP0034/2014 |
Organisation | Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
Country | France |
Start | 12/2014 |
End | 11/2017 |
Title | JellyOp |
Description | JellyOp is an opsin suitable for optogenetic manipulation of cAMP. We have made this assay generally available via adgene and have helped several groups worldwide to get started using it. |
Type Of Material | Technology assay or reagent |
Year Produced | 2013 |
Provided To Others? | Yes |
Impact | Several publications now report the using JellyOp, and we know that other datasets are in the process of completion. |
Description | Cafe Scientifique presentation |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Type Of Presentation | Keynote/Invited Speaker |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Cafe Scientifique présentation at a pub in South Manchester. n/a |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2012 |
Description | Meet the Physiologist |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Type Of Presentation | Workshop Facilitator |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Met with a large number of visitors to the Museum to present simple version of my work and to answer their questions about my own activities, science in general and the life of a scientist. n/a |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2010 |
Description | School visits (Greater Manchester) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Type Of Presentation | Keynote/Invited Speaker |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | Visited 5 schools to provide scientific workshops, organised via local coordinator of the STEM program at the Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester. n/a |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2010,2011,2012 |
Description | SciBar event, Knutsford, Cheshire |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Ran a seminar and discussion on animal photoreception for the Kuntsford branch of SciBar run by the British Science Association no actual impacts realised to date |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2013 |