Sensor traces dopamine released by single cells
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Research News Feb 25, 2017
MIT chemical engineers have developed an extremely sensitive detector that can track single cells secretion of dopamine, a brain chemical responsible for carrying messages involved in reward–motivated behavior, learning, and memory.
Using arrays of up to 20,000 tiny sensors, the researchers can monitor dopamine secretion of single neurons, allowing them to explore critical questions about dopamine dynamics. Until now, that has been very difficult to do.
A paper describing the research appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of Feb. 6.
Strano and his colleagues have already demonstrated that dopamine release occurs differently than scientists expected in a type of neural progenitor cell, helping to shed light on how dopamine may exert its effects in the brain.
Unlike most other neurotransmitters, dopamine can exert its effects beyond the synapse: Not all dopamine released into a synapse is taken up by the target cell, allowing some of the chemical to diffuse away and affect other nearby cells.
ÂIt has a local effect, which controls the signaling through the neurons, but also it has a global effect, paperÂs lead author Sebastian Kruss, a former MIT postdoc who is now at Göttingen University, in Germany says. ÂIf dopamine is in the region, it influences all the neurons nearby.Â
Tracking this dopamine diffusion in the brain has proven difficult. Neuroscientists have tried using electrodes that are specialized to detect dopamine, but even using the smallest electrodes available, they can place only about 20 near any given cell.
ÂWeÂre at the infancy of really understanding how these packets of chemicals move and their directionality, says Strano, who decided to take a different approach.
StranoÂs lab has previously developed sensors made from arrays of carbon nanotubes  hollow, nanometer–thick cylinders made of carbon, which naturally fluoresce when exposed to laser light. By wrapping these tubes in different proteins or DNA strands, scientists can customize them to bind to different types of molecules.
The carbon nanotube sensors used in this study are coated with a DNA sequence that makes the sensors interact with dopamine. When dopamine binds to the carbon nanotubes, they fluoresce more brightly, allowing the researchers to see exactly where the dopamine was released. The researchers deposited more than 20,000 of these nanotubes on a glass slide, creating an array that detects any dopamine secreted by a cell placed on the slide.
In the new PNAS study, the researchers used these dopamine sensors to explore a longstanding question about dopamine release in the brain: From which part of the cell is dopamine secreted?
To help answer that question, the researchers placed individual neural progenitor cells known as PC–12 cells onto the sensor arrays. PC–12 cells, which develop into neuron–like cells under the right conditions, have a starfish–like shape with several protrusions that resemble axons, which form synapses with other cells.
After stimulating the cells to release dopamine, the researchers found that certain dopamine sensors near the cells lit up immediately, while those farther away turned on later as the dopamine diffused away. Tracking those patterns over many seconds allowed the researchers to trace how dopamine spreads away from the cells.
Strano says one might expect to see that most of the dopamine would be released from the tips of the arms extending out from the cells. However, the researchers found that in fact more dopamine came from the sides of the arms. ÂWe have falsified the notion that dopamine should only be released at these regions that will eventually become the synapses, Strano says. ÂThis observation is counterintuitive, and itÂs a new piece of information you can only obtain with a nanosensor array like this one.Â
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Using arrays of up to 20,000 tiny sensors, the researchers can monitor dopamine secretion of single neurons, allowing them to explore critical questions about dopamine dynamics. Until now, that has been very difficult to do.
A paper describing the research appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of Feb. 6.
Strano and his colleagues have already demonstrated that dopamine release occurs differently than scientists expected in a type of neural progenitor cell, helping to shed light on how dopamine may exert its effects in the brain.
Unlike most other neurotransmitters, dopamine can exert its effects beyond the synapse: Not all dopamine released into a synapse is taken up by the target cell, allowing some of the chemical to diffuse away and affect other nearby cells.
ÂIt has a local effect, which controls the signaling through the neurons, but also it has a global effect, paperÂs lead author Sebastian Kruss, a former MIT postdoc who is now at Göttingen University, in Germany says. ÂIf dopamine is in the region, it influences all the neurons nearby.Â
Tracking this dopamine diffusion in the brain has proven difficult. Neuroscientists have tried using electrodes that are specialized to detect dopamine, but even using the smallest electrodes available, they can place only about 20 near any given cell.
ÂWeÂre at the infancy of really understanding how these packets of chemicals move and their directionality, says Strano, who decided to take a different approach.
StranoÂs lab has previously developed sensors made from arrays of carbon nanotubes  hollow, nanometer–thick cylinders made of carbon, which naturally fluoresce when exposed to laser light. By wrapping these tubes in different proteins or DNA strands, scientists can customize them to bind to different types of molecules.
The carbon nanotube sensors used in this study are coated with a DNA sequence that makes the sensors interact with dopamine. When dopamine binds to the carbon nanotubes, they fluoresce more brightly, allowing the researchers to see exactly where the dopamine was released. The researchers deposited more than 20,000 of these nanotubes on a glass slide, creating an array that detects any dopamine secreted by a cell placed on the slide.
In the new PNAS study, the researchers used these dopamine sensors to explore a longstanding question about dopamine release in the brain: From which part of the cell is dopamine secreted?
To help answer that question, the researchers placed individual neural progenitor cells known as PC–12 cells onto the sensor arrays. PC–12 cells, which develop into neuron–like cells under the right conditions, have a starfish–like shape with several protrusions that resemble axons, which form synapses with other cells.
After stimulating the cells to release dopamine, the researchers found that certain dopamine sensors near the cells lit up immediately, while those farther away turned on later as the dopamine diffused away. Tracking those patterns over many seconds allowed the researchers to trace how dopamine spreads away from the cells.
Strano says one might expect to see that most of the dopamine would be released from the tips of the arms extending out from the cells. However, the researchers found that in fact more dopamine came from the sides of the arms. ÂWe have falsified the notion that dopamine should only be released at these regions that will eventually become the synapses, Strano says. ÂThis observation is counterintuitive, and itÂs a new piece of information you can only obtain with a nanosensor array like this one.Â
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