Curated Optogenetic Publication Database

Search precisely and efficiently by using the advantage of the hand-assigned publication tags that allow you to search for papers involving a specific trait, e.g. a particular optogenetic switch or a host organism.

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 results
1.

A micro-nano optogenetic system based on probiotics for in situ host metabolism regulation.

blue YtvA L. lactis Transgene expression
Nano Res, 7 Dec 2022 DOI: 10.1007/s12274-022-4963-5 Link to full text
Abstract: Genetically engineered bacteria have aroused attention as micro-nano drug delivery systems in situ. However, conventional designs of engineered bacteria usually function constantly or autonomously, which might be non-specific or imprecise. Therefore, designing and optimizing in situ control strategy are important methodological progress for therapeutic researches of intestinal engineered bacteria. Here, a micro-nano optogenetic system based on probiotic was developed combining microelectronics, nanotechnology, and synthetic biology to achieve in situ controllable drug delivery. Firstly, optogenetic engineered Lactococcus lactis was orally administrated in the intestinal tract. A wearable optical device was designed to control optical signals remotely. Then, L. lactis could be customized to secrete peptides according to optical signals. As an example, optogenetic L. lactis system can be constructed to secrete glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) under the control of the wearable optical device to regulate metabolism. To improve the half-life of GLP-1 in vivo, Fc-domain fused GLP-1 was optimally used. Using this strategy, blood glucose, weight, and other features were well controlled in rats and mice models. Furthermore, upconversion microcapsules were introduced to increase the excitation wavelength of the optogenetic system for better penetrability. This strategy has biomedical potential to expand the toolbox for intestinal engineered bacteria.
2.

Optogenetic operated probiotics to regulate host metabolism by mimicking enteroendocrine.

blue YtvA L. lactis Transgene expression
bioRxiv, 1 Dec 2021 DOI: 10.1101/2021.11.30.470589 Link to full text
Abstract: The enteroendocrine system plays an important role in metabolism. The gut microbiome regulates enteroendocrine in an extensive way, arousing attention in biomedicine. However, conventional strategies of enteroendocrine regulation via gut microbiome are usually non-specific or imprecise. Here, an optogenetic operated probiotics system was developed combining synthetic biology and flexible electronics to achieve in situ controllable secretion to mimic enteroendocrine. Firstly, optogenetic engineered Lactococcus lactis (L. lactis) were administrated in the intestinal tract. A wearable optogenetic device was designed to control optical signals remotely. Then, L. lactis could secrete enteroendocrine hormone according to optical signals. As an example, optogenetic L. lactis could secrete glucagon-like peptide-1(GLP-1) under the control of the wearable optogenetic device. To improve the half-life of GLP-1 in vivo, the Fc domain from immunoglobulin was fused. Treated with this strategy, blood glucose, weight and other features were relatively well controlled in rats and mice models. Furthermore, up-conversion microcapsules were introduced to increase the excitation wavelength of the optogenetic system for better penetrability. This strategy has biomedical potential in metabolic diseases therapy by mimicking enteroendocrine.
3.

Near-infrared light remotely up-regulate autophagy with spatiotemporal precision via upconversion optogenetic nanosystem.

blue CRY2/CIB1 HEK293T HeLa mouse in vivo Signaling cascade control
Biomaterials, 1 Feb 2019 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.01.042 Link to full text
Abstract: In vivo noninvasively manipulating biological functions by the mediation of biosafe near infrared (NIR) light is becoming increasingly popular. For these applications, upconversion rare-earth nanomaterial holds great promise as a novel photonic element, and has been widely adopted in optogenetics. In this article, an upconversion optogenetic nanosystem that was promised to achieve autophagy up-regulation with spatiotemporal precision was designed. The implantable, wireless, recyclable, less-invasive and biocompatible system worked via two separated parts: blue light-receptor optogenetics-autophagy upregulation plasmids, for protein import; upconversion rods-encapsulated flexible capsule (UCRs-capsule), for converting tissue-penetrative NIR light into local visible blue light. Results validated that this system could achieve up-regulation of autophagy in vitro (in both HeLa and 293T cell lines) and remotely penetrate tissue (∼3.5 mm) in vivo. Since autophagy serves at a central position in intracellular signalling pathways, which is correlative with diverse pathologies, we expect that this method could establish an upconversion material-based autophagy up-regulation strategy for fundamental and clinical applications.
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