Introduction

Channelrhodopsins (ChRs) are light-activated ion channels (Nagel et al., 2003, 2002). They are predominantly found in algae with flagella and an eyespot (Rozenberg et al., 2020), where they are used for phototactic movement (Baidukova et al., 2022; Govorunova et al., 2004; Sineshchekov et al., 2005). In optogenetics, cation-conducting ChRs (CCRs) are repurposed to trigger electrical activity in excitable tissue through optically evoked membrane potential depolarization. To shunt electrical activity in neurons, both natural and engineered anion-conducting ChRs (ACRs) are predominantly used to hyperpolarize the membrane potential in neurons (Emiliani et al., 2022). Most recently, potassium-selective CCRs (KCRs) have been discovered in stramenopiles, offering an additional potential approach to silence electrogenic cells (Govorunova et al., 2022; Vierock et al., 2022).

A limiting factor to efficiently control behavior in model organisms is the need for a large spread of light that sufficiently covers a fraction of behavior-promoting neuronal circuits. Here, an activation wavelength (λmax) for optogenetic tools in the red spectral range allows for penetration in much deeper layers in comparison to blue light (Ash et al., 2017, p. 20). Therefore, optogenetic tools that are sensitive to red light are desirable. Currently, RubyACRs from the Labyrinthulea are the furthest red-shifted ACRs reported. However, they exhibit a substantial photocurrent inactivation and a slow photocurrent recovery at high light intensities 11 caused by accumulation of long-lasting and non-conducting secondary photointermediates (Sineshchekov et al., 2023). Furthermore, the operational light sensitivity that describes the ability of an optogenetic tool to exert an effect on the cell at a given photon density also defines the volume of activated neuronal tissue. Here, ACRs that combine high expression, high single-channel conductance, moderate kinetics and a high operational light sensitivity are ideal for efficient silencing of larger volumes.

We screened a panel of ChRs across the phylogenetic tree, including previously unexplored ChR clades. Among them, MsACR1, a member of the prasinophyte ACR family (Rozenberg et al., 2020), was the most activated with yellow-green light of 555 nm. The introduction of substitutions into the wild-type MsACR1 protein revealed a single mutation that caused a further redshift of the action spectrum and accelerated the photocurrent kinetics. Furthermore, we evaluated the optogenetic usability of MsACR1 and its mutant raACR for “red and accelerated ACR”. As such, we recorded dissociated hippocampal neurons at various light stimulation paradigms and tested the possibility to disrupt neuronal network activity in the primary motor cortex that directly influences locomotion behavior. The ACRs are well expressed and reliably suppressed activity with nano-watt light intensities. Additionally, raACR offers suppression of action potentials at a higher temporal resolution in comparison to MsACR1.

Results

Characterization of metagenomically identified ACRs

The opsin candidates chosen for expression represent multiple ChR subfamilies, some coming from previously unexplored clades: MsACR1 from the mamiellophycean green alga Mantoniella squamata and a member of the prasinophyte ACR family (Rozenberg et al., 2020); GpACR1, a protein from the heterotrophic cryptomonad Goniomonas pacifica unrelated to cryptophyte ACRs and instead putatively related to labyrinthulean ACRs; S16-ACR1, which we discovered in the single amplified genome (SAG) of the uncultured MAST3 stramenopile S16 (Wideman et al., 2020), represents its own deeply-branching clade; TaraACR3, a haptophyte ACR of metagenomic origin; and TaraACR1 and TaraACR2, two related ChR sequences coming from giant viruses (see Supplementary Discussion) and forming a separate ChR subfamily (Govorunova et al., 2021) (Fig. 1A and S1).

Phylogeny and electrophysiological characterization of identified ACRs.

(A) Phylogenetic relationships among known channelrhodopsin subfamilies with the described ChRs written in black and blue font. The color of the clades indicates ion selectivity: red for ACRs and blue for CCRs. The color of the dots reflects λmax with gray dots corresponding to proteins not yet having their λmax determined. See the extended version of the tree in Figure S1.

(B) Action spectra of identified ACRs. Shown are Gaussian fits, where dots are data points of single measurements.

(C) Strongest activation wavelength (λmax) derived from Gaussian fits of recorded action spectra.

(D) Example current traces of identified ACRs recorded at holding potentials between -80 mV and +40 mV. The gray bar above indicates the illumination period with excitation light of indicated wavelength. The dashed line indicates 0 nA.

(E) Peak photocurrent amplitude at -60 mV holding potential.

(F) Kinetics of the photocurrents returning to the baseline upon light-off (τoff) for tested ACR candidates.

In (C), (E) and (F), black lines are mean ± standard deviation, and circles are data points of single measurements (GpACR1 n = 4, 5, and 5; MsACR1 n = 12, 5, 5; S16-ACR1 n = 4, 7, n.d.; TaraACR1 n = 5, 7, 7; TaraACR2 n = 4, 7, 6; TaraACR3 n = 4, 6, 4 for (C), (E), and (F), respectively). Abbreviation: n.d. means not determined.

We expressed the opsin domains of the identified putative ChRs in ND7/23 cells to test for electrical activity by voltage-clamp electrophysiology in whole-cell mode. We determined the wavelength sensitivity, photocurrent amplitudes, kinetics, and ion selectivity. All constructs showed bidirectional photocurrents upon illumination with high-intensity light, typical for ChRs. However, while MsACR1, TaraACR1, and TaraACR2 showed no or only little photocurrent reduction under continuous illumination (photocurrent inactivation), TaraACR3, S16-ACR1, and GpACR1 showed considerable inactivation. In particular, S16-ACR1 photocurrents showed almost complete inactivation similar to some previously described ACRs and CCRs (Oppermann et al., 2019, p. 201; Sineshchekov et al., 2020). This effect was more pronounced at positive holding potentials. GpACR1 photocurrents, on the other hand, elicited a secondary peak photocurrent upon light-off (Fig. 1D) indicative of photointermediate inactivation during illumination (Berndt et al., 2009).

Most of the tested ChRs showed a λmax between 470 nm and 510 nm, while MsACR1 exhibited a considerable redshifted λmax at 555 nm (Fig. 1B, C, and S3A). Its action spectrum further shows a small secondary peak at 460 nm (Fig. S3A), most likely caused by energy transfer from the fused fluorophore mCerulean3 (Markwardt et al., 2011), as previously shown for RubyACRs (Govorunova et al., 2020). At -60 mV holding potential, photocurrent amplitudes of up to 10 nA were elicited (Fig. 1E), decaying with an off-kinetic (τoff) between 3 ms (TaraACR2) and 400 ms (GpACR1) (Fig. 1F). The light sensitivity was proportional to τoff. TaraACR3, GpACR1, and MsACR1, with slow off-kinetics, had a high light sensitivity with half-maximal activation at 20 to 40 μW/mm2. In contrast, TaraACR2 and S16-ACR1 photocurrents did not saturate at light intensities up to 4 mW/mm2, demonstrating a low light sensitivity (Fig. S3B and C).

To determine the ion selectivity of the ChRs, either the external Cl- ([Cl-]ex) was replaced with Asp- or the external Na+ ([Na+]ex) with NMDG+. Only the replacement of [Cl-]ex, but not [Na+]ex, resulted in photocurrent changes and a strong shift in the reversal potential (Erev) close to the Nernst potential (ENernst) of Cl- (Fig. S3D-F). Therefore, all tested ChRs are ACRs.

Single-residue mutations affect the spectral sensitivity of MsACR1

The strong activation with yellow-green light prompted us to explore the applicability of MsACR1 as an optogenetic silencer. Therefore, to further shift its sensitivity to the red, we tested several point mutations. Generally, a redshift can be achieved by either increasing the polarity close to the β-ionone ring of the retinal chromophore or reducing the polarity in the proximity of the retinal Schiff base (RSB).

First, we tested mutations in the vicinity of the β-ionone ring (Fig. 2A). The exchange of the conserved Proline in this region (HsBR P186; see Fig. S2 for an alignment) generally causes strong blue-shifts (Lu et al., 2001). However, the converse G186P mutation in MsACR1 also blue-shifts the activity (Fig. 2D), as do all other tested replacements (G186C, G186H, G186T), with a strong amplitude reduction in the case of G186H (Fig. 2E). Other tested replacements close to the β-ionone ring either did not affect λmax or resulted in hypsochromic shifts, including mutations mirroring residues unique to the recently described RubyACRs: W142Y, W182Q, and G186I (Fig. 2D) (Govorunova et al., 2020). The only exception was F138N, which showed a small redshift (Fig. 2D) but also strongly decelerated τoff (Fig. 2F).

Color-tuning of MsACR1.

(A) Structural model of the MsACR1 retinal binding pocket with mutated residues indicated. Residues close to the β-ionone ring are labeled in cyan, and those close to the retinal Schiff base (RSB) are labeled purple. Residue S218, the position of the raACR mutation, is labeled light-red, and the putative counterion D215 is labeled black. Residue side chains and the all-trans-retinal chromophore are shown as sticks except for G123 and G186, where the C? is shown as a sphere. Oxygen is colored in red, nitrogen in blue, and sulfur in yellow.

(B) Example current traces of MsACR1 (blue) and raACR (MsACR1-S218A; light-red). Gray bars above the traces indicate an illumination period with an excitation light of 560 nm. The dashed line indicates 0 nA.

(C) Action spectra of MsACR1 (blue) and raACR (red). Dots are data points of single measurements fitted with a Gaussian function (solid line).

(D) Strongest activation wavelength (λmax) of the indicated single-residue mutants.

(E) Photocurrent amplitudes at -60 mV holding potential (I-60 mv) of the indicated mutants upon excitation with 560 nm light.

(F) Kinetics of the photocurrents returning to the baseline upon light-off (τoff).

In (D-F), black lines are mean ± standard deviation, and circles are data points of single measurements (WT n = 12, 5, and 5, respectively; Mutants n = 3-7).

Next, we focused on the active site close to the retinal Schiff base (RSB). Replacing F185, a residue oriented towards the putative counterion D215 (Fig. 2A), with a Tyrosine (F185Y) also resulted in a blue-shifted λmax (Fig. 2D) and strongly decelerated τoff (Fig. 2F). Substitution of T87 with Alanine led to a minor redshift (Fig. 2D) but decreased photocurrent amplitudes and decelerated τoff (Fig. 2E and F) (Oda et al., 2018). Introduction of Valine or Serine (T87V and T87S) did not affect the spectral sensitivity (Fig. 2D).

Previously, in Chrimson, the residue A298 next to the retinal-binding Lysine was associated with the redshifted absorption of this ChR (Oda et al., 2018). In MsACR1, the homologous residue is S218. Replacing it with an Alanine (MsACR1-S218A) accelerated τoff 5-fold (Fig. 2F) and shifted λmax 20 nm towards longer wavelengths (Fig. 2D and S4A). Consequently, the half-maximal activity on the red side of the spectrum also shifted from 605 nm to 635 nm (Fig. 2C). Additionally, this mutation increased the photocurrent amplitude at 690 nm two-fold in comparison with the wild-type. Comparatively with GtACR1, the most commonly used ACR for optogenetic application (Mahn et al., 2016; Needham et al., 2019; Tsunoda et al., 2017), MsACR1-S218A exhibits a 19-fold larger photocurrent at 690 nm (Fig. S4B). Due to these advantageous properties to existing ACRs, we coined the mutant raACR for “red and accelerated ACR”.

raACR allows efficient shunting in neurons at nano-Watt light powers

Next, we explored neuronal applications of both MsACR1 and raACR in an in vitro neuronal preparation. We then transduced dissociated hippocampal neurons with adeno-associated viruses carrying the ACRs under the control of a pan-neuronal human Synapsin I (hSyn1) promoter. After ten days, membrane-localized fluorescence was visible in somatic, axonal, and dendritic compartments without apparent intracellular or vesicular aggregation (Fig. 3A).

Silencing of neuronal activity in dissociated hippocampal neurons using MsACR1 and raACR.

(A) Confocal image of a hippocampal neuron ten days after viral transduction expressing MsACR1-mCerulean under control of the hSynapsin1 (hSyn) promoter. The magnified portion of the image of a putative axonal compartment (right side, lower panel) shows a high degree of membrane-targeting of MsACR1. Magnification of the somatodendritic compartment (right side, upper panel) reveals the absence of visible protein aggregation.

(B) Voltage traces of neuronal spiking elicited by a 1-s 250 pA current step illustrating the efficiency of optical silencing at various light intensities (ranging from 200 to 15 x 103 nW/mm2). MsACR1 and raACR were activated for 300 ms with 550 nm light (gray bars) during the current step.

(C) Relative neuronal spiking probability upon optical silencing by MsACR1 (blue) or raACR (red) excited with 550 nm light, as illustrated in (B), at all tested light intensities.

(D) Voltage traces of MsACR1-expressing hippocampal neurons upon current ramps under no light, continuous or 10 Hz pulsed illumination with 550 nm or 635 nm light. Continuous illumination evoked a spike at light on-set (on-set spike).

(E) Spikes elicited by current-ramp injection in the dark (d) or upon continuous or pulsed illumination (i) of 550 nm or 635 nm in neurons expressing MsACR1 (upper row) or raACR (lower row), as shown in (D). Black lines are mean ± standard error, and circles represent single measurements (n = 10-16). Paired two-tailed Wilcoxon or Student’s t-tests were used for MsACR1 and raACR comparisons (p < 0.05).

(F) Temporal precision of neuronal inhibition of MsACR1 (blue) and raACR (red). A paradigm was designed to measure the period after successful suppression of a current-evoked spike in which no new spike can be triggered.

(G) Population data of MsACR1 (blue) and raACR (red) for the experiment are shown in (F).

Current-evoked spiking was strongly suppressed in single neurons at intensities >200 nW/mm2 using 550 nm light. Excitation of MsACR1 at just 5 nW/mm2 light decreased the spiking probability already by 25% for the slower wild-type MsACR1. At light intensities between 100 and 7100 nW/mm2, evoked activity was further reduced to 30-90% for both ACRs (Fig. 3B and C). To quantify the shunting efficiency at different illumination protocols, we either applied 550 nm or 635 nm light continuously or pulsed at 10 Hz (2-ms pulse width) during a current-ramp injection (Fig. 3D) (Tsunoda et al., 2017). Notably, the pulsed illumination reduced the photon exposure 50-fold in comparison to continuous illumination. MsACR1 and raACR both completely silenced spiking during continuous illumination (Fig. 3E). However, at the illumination-pulse on-set, we observed a light-evoked spike (Fig. 3D). This has been similarly described for other ACRs and arises in axonal compartments with a higher intracellular chloride concentration in comparison to the soma, triggering initial chloride efflux upon ACR-activation that leads to a short depolarization (Mahn et al., 2016).

To avoid misinterpretations arising from an on-set spike during in-vivo optogenetic experiments, we designed and tested soma-targeted (st) versions of MsACR1 and raACR. Therefore, we fused a short targeting sequence from the voltage-gated potassium channel Kv2.1 to the N-terminus of the ACRs. We determined the on-set spike probability for st-MsACR1 and st-raACR under continuous and pulsed illumination with 550 nm. The latter significantly reduced the on-set spike probability for both versions (Fig. S5C). Furthermore, in comparison to their untargeted versions, st-raACR showed a significantly reduced on-set spike probability, while st-MsACR1 showed a trend of a reduced on-set spike probability (Fig. S5D). MsACR1 and st-MsACR1 also nearly completely shunt all spikes during pulsed illumination independent of the light color. Activation of raACR, or its somat-targeted version, significantly reduced the number of spikes under all conditions but with a lower potency compared to MsACR1 (Fig. 3E and S5B), likely due to the reduced ion flux in a single photocycle.

We further assessed the minimum duration required to re-evoke a current-induced spike after optically suppressing a preceding action potential (Fig. 3F). raACR allows spike-triggering with a 50% spiking frequency already 50 ms after optical silencing, whereas upon activation of MsACR1, a 50% spiking frequency was reached only 180 ms post-shunting (Fig. 3G).

To investigate the efficiency of MsACR1 and raACR in vivo, we assessed how transient neuronal network disruption in the primary motor cortex (M1) translates into locomotion impairments. As such, we injected viral particles of the ACRs into the M1 of wild-type C57BL/6 mice and implanted a 200-μm optical fiber above the injection site (Fig. 4A).

Inhibition of locomotion in rodents in vivo using MsACR1 and raACR.

(A) Confocal images of coronal brain slices confirm the expression of raACR in the primary motor cortex (M1) and the accurate placement of the optical cannula. A close-up of the injection site confirms homogenous expression in the transduced brain volume with no apparent neuronal degeneration.

(B) Experimental design and stimulation protocol. Animals were allowed to explore the arena for one minute before stimulation at 20 Hz with 635 nm for 2s.

(C) The trajectory of a mouse for bouts with no illumination (black) and periods during light stimulation (red).

(D) Calculated velocity based on pixel deviation during two consecutive frames for periods with illumination (+) and no illumination (Mann-Whitney U=23, P < 0.01).

Both ACRs exhibit homogenous expression in cortical neurons without visible intracellular aggregates or cell death (Fig. 4A). Two-second illumination bouts with 635-nm light pulsed at 20 Hz led to immediate locomotion arrest in all tested animals (Fig. 4B and C).

We quantified these motor arrests by calculating the pixel movement of a body marker between two consecutive frames during periods without and with illumination (Fig. 4D). While activation of either ACR led to significantly reduced velocity, the effect was stronger for MsACR1 likely due to its longer lasting response in comparison to raACR (Fig. 3G).

Discussion

Despite the rapidly evolving optogenetic toolbox that offers versatile possibilities to manipulate the electrical activity of excitable cells, highly-efficient red-light activatable tools are still sparse. We identified MsACR1 and tailored a red-light sensitive ACR with large photocurrent amplitudes and fast off-kinetics that we coined raACR. We further demonstrated its applicability and potency in several optogenetic experiments. We also showed that MsACR1 and raACR are highly light-sensitive and therefore allow for an efficient implementation of a 20-Hz pulsed illumination paradigm that drastically reduces the number of photons put into biological tissue.

Besides its availability as a useful optogenetic tool, the wild-type MsACR1 may also offer a venue for answering questions about algal phototaxis. Previously, we suggested that in motile prasinophytes, both ACRs and CCRs may cooperate to regulate motility (Rozenberg et al., 2020). Recently, proton-conduction has been shown for CCR1 from Mantoniella squamata (Govorunova et al., 2021). Therefore, M. squamata may be a suitable algae species to investigate the physiological function of proton- and chloride-carried photocurrents.

Furthermore, within the characterized set of ACRs are two of viral origin, TaraACR1 and TaraACR2. The growing number of viral rhodopsins (Bratanov et al., 2019, p. 20; Needham et al., 2019, p. 20; Rozenberg et al., 2020; Zabelskii et al., 2020) poses a question about their function during viral infection: Are they modifying the phototaxis of the host, or are the rhodopsins disrupting the membrane potential, leading to cell death? In comparison to other previously characterized viral ChRs (Rozenberg et al., 2020; Zabelskii et al., 2020), the two described here were well-expressed and showed large photocurrents. Also, TaraACR2 showed a very fast photocurrent off-kinetic comparable to ZipACR and RapACR (Govorunova et al., 2018, 2017).

While the algal GpACR1 and S16-ACR1 are unsuitable for optogenetic applications due to their photocurrent amplitudes and kinetics, their photocurrents unravel interesting molecular features. GpACR1 photocurrents elicit a second peak upon light shut-off, a behavior seen before for the slow-cycling CrChR2 variant C128S (Berndt et al., 2009) or a viral ChR (Zabelskii et al., 2020). Its appearance may be caused by the photoisomerization of photocycle intermediates, as similarly described for ReaChR (Krause et al., 2017, p. 20). S16-ACR1, on the other hand, shows a strong voltage-dependent photocurrent inactivation similar to MerMAIDs (Oppermann et al., 2019, p. 2) and may offer further insight into this process in general.

The action spectrum of MsACR1 shows its highest activity in yellow-green light but also a distinct blue-light peak. The latter is possibly caused by an energy transfer from the attached fluorophore to the rhodopsin. This was previously reported for RubyACRs (Govorunova et al., 2020) and is further supported by the fact that this peak also appears and does not shift in the action spectrum of raACR, as it only decreases in amplitude (Fig. S4B).

Surprisingly, the majority of the substitutions in MsACR1 close to the β-ionone ring resulted in a blue shift, whereas only one mutation (F138N) caused a small redshift, suggesting that this region is already quite polar. In contrast, the active site around the RSB was more susceptible to modification, although the effect of MsACR1-T87A was less pronounced in comparison to Chrimson (ChrimsonSA) (Oda et al., 2018). However, upon replacing S218 with Alanine, the action spectrum was shifted by 20 nm towards longer wavelengths, mimicking several orange- or red-light absorbing ChRs (Oda et al., 2018). Similar shifts have been achieved naturally and artificially in animal rhodopsins (Liénard et al., 2021).

Both MsACR1 and raACR reliably shunt spiking in vitro and induced motor arrest in vivo using 635 nm light. Shunting during continuous illumination was complete, though light-evoked on-set spikes observed for both ACRs were minimized with pulsed illumination and soma-targeting of MsACR1 and raACR. Presumably, longer photon exposure is required to evoke this spike, as previously evident for GtACR1 using 10-ms light pulses (Mahn et al., 2016). Therefore, shorter or ramped-on light pulses can reduce the probability of such events. Overall, pulsed illumination, together with soma-targeting, is recommended for artifact-free in vivo optogenetic experiments.

Pulsed illumination was more efficient for MsACR1 due to its slower kinetics and accompanying increased ion flux per photocycle. On the other hand, the accelerated kinetics of raACR allows for a higher temporal resolution, enabling current-evoked spiking already 50 ms post-illumination. Also, in contrast to other ACRs commonly used as optogenetic silencers, both MsACR1 and raACR don’t show any photocurrent inactivation during continuous illumination and can be activated again virtually instantly without photocurrent decline. This makes them reliable in optogenetic applications. Furthermore, its redshift reduces potential cross-activation when used in conjunction with blue-light-sensitive optogenetic tools (Vierock et al., 2021).

Lastly, MsACR1 and raACR exhibited an unprecedentedly high operational light sensitivity that inhibits neuronal activity at light intensities as low as 20 nW/mm2. Therefore, we believe that both ACRs are a valuable addition to the optogenetic toolbox when long-lasting inhibition of larger brain volumes is required.

Methods

Identification and phylogenetic analysis

Two of the ChR sequences characterized here have been identified in (Rozenberg et al., 2020): MsACR1 from Mantoniella squamata CCAP 1965/1 (1KP_QXSZ_2010086.p1, extracted from a 1KP transcriptome assembly (2019)) and GpACR1 from Goniomonas pacifica (the originally reported truncated sequence MMETSP0108_DN24423_c0_g1_i1.p1 was extended by transcriptome re-assembly of the raw data from MMETSP0108 and MMETSP0107 (Keeling et al., 2014)). S16-ACR1 was extracted from the single-amplified genome (SAG) S16 assigned to the marine stramenopile clade MAST3g (PRJNA379597-S16_NODE_311_gmes_4206, the coding sequence was predicted with GeneMarkS in the SAG assembly from (Wideman et al., 2020)). Sequences TaraACR1 (from contig SAMEA2622336_1814029), TaraACR2 (contig SAMEA2619952_516956), and TaraACR3 (overlapping contigs SAMEA2621277_718384 and SAMEA2621278_296705) were retrieved from a custom assembly of the Tara Oceans data (Philosof et al., 2017).

For phylogenetic reconstruction, rhodopsin domain sequences of all records included in the Catalog of Natural Channelrhodopsins v. 1.3 (Rozenberg, 2023), covering characterized and uncharacterized proteins, were taken and duplicated domains were excluded. The domain sequences were aligned with mafft v. 7.520 (automatic mode) (Katoh et al., 2002), the alignment was trimmed with trimal v. 1.4.1 (-gt 0.1) (Capella-Gutiérrez et al., 2009), and the phylogeny was reconstructed with iqtree2 v. 2.2.0.3 (-pers 0.2 -nstop 500) with 1000 ultrafast bootstrap replicates (Hoang et al., 2018, p. 2; Minh et al., 2020).

Structure-supported alignment of the rhodopsin domains for the tested ChRs and reference proteins (BR, ChR2, Chrimson, and GtACR1) was performed with t_coffee v. 13.45.0.4846264 (algorithms sap_pair, mustang_pair, t_coffee_msa and probcons_ms). For the reference proteins available, crystal structures were utilized, while for the ChRs characterized here, structural models were obtained with AlphaFold (Jumper et al., 2021) as implemented in the colabfold workflow (Mirdita et al., 2022). Transmembrane regions of the α-helices of ChR2 (PDB: 6EID) were taken from the OPM database (Lomize et al., 2012).

The bioinformatics workflow is available from the GitHub repository https://github.com/BejaLab/ACRs.

Molecular Biology

For electrophysiological analysis, human/mouse codon-optimized genes coding for the identified ChRs were ordered (GenScript, Piscataway, NJ or Integrated DNA Technologies, Coralville, IA) and cloned in frame with mCherry, mScarlet, or mCerulean fluorophores into pEGFP-C1 or pcDNA3.1 vectors using Gibson cloning (Gibson et al., 2009) or restriction digest (FastDigest NheI and AgeI, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). The membrane localization of GpACR1 and S16-ACR1 was improved using a membrane trafficking sequence and endoplasmic reticulum release sequence, as previously used (Grimm et al., 2018; Rozenberg et al., 2020). Single residues in MsACR1 were replaced by site-directed mutagenesis using Pfu polymerase (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA). A structural model of MsACR1 was generated using AlphaFold (Jumper et al., 2021), and the retinal chromophore was added from BR (PDB: 2AT9).

MsACR1 and raACR, in frame with a mCerulean and separated by a P2A site, were subcloned into pAAV2 for expression in neurons under control of the Calmodulin kinase II promoter using Gibson cloning (Gibson et al., 2009) and further subcloned into pAAV2 under the control of the human synapsin promoter and flanked by lox71 and lox66 sites using EcoRI and BamHI restriction sites (FastDigest, Thermo Fisher Scientific). The constructs were soma-targeted using the Kv2.1 targeting domain.

Molecular cloning was planned using NEBuilder v. 2.2.7+ (New England Biolabs Inc., Ipswich, MA) and SnapGene v. 5.0+ (GSL Biotech LLC, Chicago, IL).

ND7/23 Cell culture

For electrophysiology, measurements of the identified ChRs were expressed in a mouse neuroblastoma and rat neuron hybrid cell line (ND7/23 cells, ECACC 92090903, Sigma-Aldrich, Munich, Germany). Cells were cultured as previously described (Grimm et al., 2017) at 37°C and 5% CO2 in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium (DMEM, Sigma-Aldrich) supplemented with 5% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 100 μg/ml Penicillin/Streptomycin (both Sigma-Aldrich). For experiments, cells were seeded at a density of 0.4x105 cells/ml on poly-D-lysine-coated coverslips and supplemented with 1 μM all-trans-retinal (Sigma-Aldrich). After one day, cells were transiently transfected with 2 μg DNA by lipofection (FuGENE? HD, Promega, Madison, WI).

Electrophysiology in ND7/23 cells

One to two days after transfection, photocurrents were recorded using the patch-clamp method in whole-cell mode at room temperature. The whole-cell configuration was established at ≥1 GΩ membrane resistance, and cells were discarded at access resistance >10 MΩ. Patch-pipettes were pulled from borosilicate glass capillaries (G150F-8P, Warner Instruments, Hamden, CT) to resistances of 1.5 MΩ to 3 MΩ using a micropipette puller (P-1000, Sutter Instruments, Novato, CA) and fire-polished. During measurements, a 140 mM NaCl agar bridge was used as the reference electrode. A 2 kHz Bessel filter was used for signal amplification (AxoPatch200B). Signals were digitized at 10 kHz (DigiData400) and acquired using Clampex 10.4 software (all Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). A Polychrom V (TILL Photonics, Planegg, Germany) with 7-nm bandwidth was used as the light source and coupled into an Axiovert 100 microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany). The light delivery was controlled by a VS25 and VCM-D1 shutter system (Vincent Associates, Rochester, NY). Light intensities were adjusted manually for light titration experiments using neutral density filters. In recordings of action spectra a motorized filter wheel (Newport, Irvine, CA) was used to ensure delivery of equal photon densities. Light intensities in light titration experiments were measured in the sample plane using a P9710 optometer (Gigahertz Optik, Türkenfeld, Germany) and calculated for the illuminated field (0.066 mm2) of the W Plan-Apochromat x40/1.0 DIC objective (Carl Zeiss).

Measurements were always started in standard buffer (Extracellular (in mM): 110 NaCl, 1 KCl, 1 CsCl, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 10 HEPES; Intracellular (in mM): 110 NaCl, 1 KCl, 1 CsCl, 2 CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 10 HEPES, 10 EDTA). The pH was adjusted to 7 using N-methyl-D-glucamine (NMDG) or citric acid. The osmolarity was measured (Osmomat 3000basic, Gonotec, Berlin, Germany) and adjusted to 320 mOsm (extracellular) or 290 mOSM (intracellular) using glucose. For ion selectivity measurements, NaCl was replaced by 110 mM NaAsp or 110 mM NMDGCl extracellularly. The extracellular buffer was exchanged manually by adding at least 3 ml to the measuring chamber (volume ∼0.5 ml). Excess buffer was removed using a Ringer Bath Handler MPCU (Lorenz Messgerätebau, Katlenburg-Lindau, Germany).

Action spectra were recorded in standard conditions at -60 mV using illumination with low-intensity light applied for 10 ms. λmax was determined by normalizing recorded action spectra to the respective maximum photocurrent and applying a Gauss function to the data trimmed between ±70 nm and ±90 nm from the maximum. To determine ion selectivities, photocurrents were elicited using high-intensity light close to λmax applied for 0.5 s to 1 s at -80 mV to +40 mV increased in steps of 20 mV. The liquid junction potential was calculated and corrected during measurements. Light titrations were recorded at -60 mV with light applied for 1 s. The activity of GtACR1, MsACR1, and raACR with green and red light was measured at -60 mV with optical filters (560±10 nm with 82% transmittance and 692±18 nm with 99% transmittance) inserted directly into the light path.

Hippocampal neurons cell culture and electrophysiology

Primary cultured hippocampal neurons were prepared, as described in (Karpova et al., 2013). Neurons were plated (25,000 cells on 12 mm coverslip), maintained at 37 ºC (5% CO2), and transduced with crude AAV viruses (1-5 x 1010 mg/ml) three days after seeding. Experiments were conducted ten to twelve days after transduction. Borosilicate glass pipettes (BF100-58-10, Sutter Instruments) were pulled using a micropipette puller (P-2000, Sutter Instruments; 2-3 MΩ). Pipettes were filled using the internal solution as follows (in mM): 135 potassium gluconate, 4 KCl, 2 NaCl, 10 HEPES, 4 EGTA, 4 MgATP, 0.3 NaGTP, pH 7.3 (KOH). Tyrode’s solution was used as the external solution and prepared as follows (in mM): 125 NaCl, 2 KCl, 30 glucose, 2 MgCl2, 25 HEPES, 2 CaCl2, pH 7.3 (NaOH).

Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of the ACRs were carried out under visual control with a 12-bit monochrome CMOS camera (Hamamatsu Model OrcaFlash). Current clamp recordings were performed using a MultiClamp700B amplifier, filtered at 8 kHz and digitized at 10 kHz using a Digidata 1550A digitizer (Molecular Devices). Neurons were held at -60 mV, and spiking was evoked with a ramp (600 pA injection; 500 ms) or rectangle protocol (pA injection considering the rheobase + 50 pA; 700 ms). The inhibition was tested by activating the ACRs using continuous (700 ms) and pulsed (10 Hz, 2 ms) light and two different wavelengths (550 nm and 635 nm). The pE-4000 (CoolLED, UK) was used for light stimulation, and the light intensities were measured using a PM100D console and an S130VC sensor (Thorlabs, US).

Stereotactic injection of viral vectors

Eight-week-old C57BL/6 mice were anesthetized with isoflurane (∼1% in O2, v/v) and placed into a stereotaxic frame (RWD). A craniotomy (∼1 mm in diameter) AP ML was made above the injection site. Virus suspensions were slowly injected (100 nl min−1) using a 34 G beveled needle (Nanofil syringe, World Precision Instruments). After injection, the needle was left in place for an additional 5 min and then slowly withdrawn. The surgical procedure was continued with the implantation of an optical fiber (Thorlabs 200um). The optical fiber was secured to the skull using Metabond (Parkell) and dental acrylic. The surgical incision was closed with tissue glue, and 5 mg kg−1 Caprofen was subcutaneously injected for postsurgical analgesia. For AAV/DJ-hSyn1-MsACR-mCerulean and AAV/DJ-hSyn1-raACR-mCerulean, we injected 300 nl with a viral titer of 4.5 x 1012 vg/ml and 1 x 1013 vg/ml, respectively.

Motor cortex behavior

Mice were attached to patch cords before placing them into the middle of the arena (50 cm x 50 cm). Animals were allowed to explore the arena freely for 1 min. Afterward, optical stimulation started with a duration of 2 s at 20 Hz coming from a laser source that was either 473 nm or 635 nm (MBL-III-473-100mW and MRL-III-635L-200mW). We adjusted the light power to 0.5 mW on the tip of the fiber. Stimulation bouts were interspersed with 5-sec periods with no light. Stimulation was repeated 25 times before leaving the animal for another 1 min in the arena.

DeepLapCut (Mathis et al., 2018) was used to track animals with several body poses (head, ears, snout, body center, and tail). Additionally, we estimated the position of the patch cord, which yielded a drastically improved overall likelihood for body poses. The average pixel deviation between consecutive frames was average for 2 s during stimulation and 2 s after stimulation.

Acknowledgements

We thank Sandra Augustin, Celina Dölle, Tharsana Tharmalingam, and Maila Reh for outstanding technical assistance, Jonas Wietek for pre-selection of Tara Oceans candidates, and Enrico Peter for help with AlphaFold to generate the MsACR1 structural model. This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) grant SFB 1078 B2 221545957 (P.H.) and Israel Science Foundation grant 3131/20 (O.B.). O.B. holds the Louis and Lyra Richmond Chair in Life Science. P.H. is Hertie Senior Professor for Neuroscience supported by the Hertie Foundation. T.F. was supported by Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation/CAPES post-doctoral research fellowship (99999.001756/2014-01) and C.G.C. by the EU program “Novel imaging and brain stimulation methods and technologies’’ JPco-FuND - NiPARK). M.P. received funding from the Leibniz Association program “BestMinds’’ MP J28/2017 SheLi.

Author contributions

J.O., P.H., A.R., and O.B. conceived the project. A.R. performed bioinformatic analyses. J.O. and P.H. designed molecular characterization. J.O. acquired and analyzed electrophysiological data in ND7/23 cells. T.F., C.G.C., and M.P. designed neurobiological experiments. T.F. acquired and analyzed data in hippocampal neurons in vitro. C.G.C. acquired data from behavioral experiments, and M.P. performed analysis. The manuscript was written by all authors.

Declaration of interests

The authors declare no competing interests.

Supplement

Supplementary Discussion

Viral origin of the environmental ChRs TaraACR1 and TaraACR2

The short metagenomic contigs SAMEA2622336_1814029 (1748 bp) and SAMEA2619952_516956 (1239 bp) encoding the ChRs TaraACR1 and TaraACR2, respectively, were initially suspected to be of viral origin due to lack of introns and short intergenic regions to the neighboring genes. The neighboring genes, a DUF285 protein (SAMEA2622336_1814029) and a short fragment of a gene for a Pif1 helicase (SAMEA2619952_516956), are from protein families widespread among, albeit not restricted to, giant viruses. More importantly, the promoter sequence of TaraACR1 contained the classical mimiviral early promoter motif AAAATTGA (Suhre et al., 2005) characteristic to Imitervirales and some other giant viruses, while that of TaraACR2 contained its minor variation AAAAATGA prevalent e.g. in the genome of Aureococcus anophagefferens virus (Imitervirales) (Roitman et al., 2023). Finally, blastn searches against the GVMAGs database (Schulz et al., 2020) yielded genomes belonging to the Imitervirales containing highly similar nucleotide stretches (best hits to GVMAG-M-3300001348-7 [E-value 3.3×10-80, 72.5% nucleotide identity] and GVMAG-M-3300023184-101 [E-value 8.7×10-10, 90.2% identity, respectively, both belonging to the Mesomimiviridae (Aylward et al., 2021)). Although, none of them contained the ChR genes themselves. TaraACR1 and TaraACR2 represent a second example of ChR acquisition by giant viruses, alongside prasinophyte ACRs in genomes of viruses closely related to Pyramimonas orientalis virus 01b (Imitervirales family IM_12 (Aylward et al., 2021)) and a putative Algavirales virus (Rozenberg et al., 2020, p. 20). The appearance of ion-conducting rhodopsins encoded in genomes of giant algal viruses is not restricted to channelrhodopsins, as two unrelated cases of functional rhodopsin cation channels/pumps are known from the Mesomimiviridae (viral rhodopsins (Bratanov et al., 2019; Zabelskii et al., 2020)) and the Coccolithoviridae (proton-conducting heliorhodopsins (Hososhima et al., 2022)).

Supplementary Figures

Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic reconstruction of relationships among known channelrhodopsins.

The sequences chosen for the analysis were taken from the Catalog of Natural Channelrhodopsins (Rozenberg, 2023). Names based on the taxonomic affiliation of the organisms possessing the corresponding genes are indicated for major clades. The clades are colored according to the known or putative ion selectivity of their members: red for ACRs and blue for CCRs. The color of the dots at the edge tips reflects λmax with gray dots corresponding to proteins known to generate photocurrents but having their λmax not yet determined. Dots on the internal branches reflect ultrafast bootstrap values: black for ≥95 and gray for ≥90. The positions of the proteins characterized here are highlighted with labels. HF – heterotrophic flagellates.

Alignment of the rhodopsin domains of the ChRs tested in the current study and chosen reference proteins.

The alignment was constructed using structural information using the crystal structures of BR (PDB: 1AP9), ChR2 (6EID), Chrimson (5ZIH), and GtACR1 (6CSM) and AlphaFold structures for the ChRs studied here. Positions for which MsACR1 mutants were tested are indicated below. The gray bars above the alignment columns indicate transmembrane regions as reported in the OPM database for ChR2.

Light sensitivity and ion selectivity of identified ACRs.

(A) Full action spectra of identified ACRs. Shown are mean ± standard deviation connected by lines.

(B) Light titration of identified ACRs at light intensities between 38 nW/mm2 and 3.2 mW/mm2. Shown are mean ± standard deviation connected by lines.

(C) Half-maximal activation light intensity determined by the logarithmic fit of light titration curves.

(D) Exemplary photocurrent traces of MsACR1 upon activation with 560 nm light at the indicated extracellular Cl- concentration.

(E) Current-Voltage relationship of MsACR1 at indicated extracellular ion conditions.

(F) Reversal potential shifts (DVrev) upon exchange of the extracellular buffer.

In (C) and (E), lines are mean ± standard deviation, and circles are data points of single measurements (n ≥ 3 for all constructs).

The red-light activity of ACRs.

(A) Structural model of the MsACR1. Residue side chains and the all-trans-retinal chromophore are shown as sticks except for G123 and G186, where the C? is shown as a sphere. Oxygen is colored in red, nitrogen in blue, and sulfur in yellow.

(B) Full action spectra of MsACR1 and raACR. Shown are mean ± standard deviation connected by lines.

(C) Photocurrent amplitude of GtACR1, MsACR1, and raACR upon activation with 560 nm and 692 nm light. Lines are mean ± standard deviation, and circles are data points of single measurements (n = 3 for all constructs).

Soma-targeting of MsACR1 and raACR.

(A) Stimulation and illumination paradigms used to assess silencing efficiency for soma-targeted MsACR1 and raACR in dissociated hippocampal neurons.

(B) Spikes elicited by current-ramp injection in no light (d) or upon continuous or pulsed illumination (i) of 550 nm or 635 nm in neurons expressing MsACR1 (upper row) or raACR (lower row), as shown in (A). Black lines are mean ± standard error, and circles represent single measurements (n = 5 - 9). Paired Wilcoxon or Student’s t-tests were used for st-MsACR1 and st-raACR comparisons (p < 0.05).

(C) Wilcoxon-test statistic (one-sided) for the occurrence of a light-evoked spike during continuous and pulsed light stimulation of soma targeted MsACR1 and raACR (n = 5 - 14), p < 0.05.

(D) Wilcoxon-test statistic (one-sided) for the occurrence of a light-evoked spike during pulsed light stimulation (n = 5 - 16), p < 0.05.