Optogenetic control of ROS production

Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) are known to cause oxidative damage to DNA, proteins and lipids. In addition, recent evidence suggests that ROS can also initiate signaling cascades that respond to stress and modify specific redox-sensitive moieties as a regulatory mechanism. This suggests that ROS ar...

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Main Authors: Andrew P. Wojtovich, Thomas H. Foster
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-01-01
Series:Redox Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213231714000342
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spelling doaj-64c13e53563045e98802d144c0987b912020-11-25T00:09:54ZengElsevierRedox Biology2213-23172014-01-012C36837610.1016/j.redox.2014.01.019Optogenetic control of ROS productionAndrew P. Wojtovich0Thomas H. Foster1Department of Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center, Box 711, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642, USADepartment of Imaging Sciences, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USA Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) are known to cause oxidative damage to DNA, proteins and lipids. In addition, recent evidence suggests that ROS can also initiate signaling cascades that respond to stress and modify specific redox-sensitive moieties as a regulatory mechanism. This suggests that ROS are physiologically-relevant signaling molecules. However, these sensor/effector molecules are not uniformly distributed throughout the cell. Moreover, localized ROS damage may elicit site-specific compensatory measures. Thus, the impact of ROS can be likened to that of calcium, a ubiquitous second messenger, leading to the prediction that their effects are exquisitely dependent upon their location, quantity and even the timing of generation. Despite this prediction, ROS signaling is most commonly intuited through the global administration of chemicals that produce ROS or by ROS quenching through global application of antioxidants. Optogenetics, which uses light to control the activity of genetically-encoded effector proteins, provides a means of circumventing this limitation. Photo-inducible genetically-encoded ROS-generating proteins (RGPs) were originally employed for their phototoxic effects and cell ablation. However, reducing irradiance and/or fluence can achieve sub-lethal levels of ROS that may mediate subtle signaling effects. Hence, transgenic expression of RGPs as fusions to native proteins gives researchers a new tool to exert spatial and temporal control over ROS production. This review will focus on the new frontier defined by the experimental use of RGPs to study ROS signaling. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213231714000342ROS signalingPhotodynamic therapyminiSOGKillerRedOptogeneticsPhototoxicity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew P. Wojtovich
Thomas H. Foster
spellingShingle Andrew P. Wojtovich
Thomas H. Foster
Optogenetic control of ROS production
Redox Biology
ROS signaling
Photodynamic therapy
miniSOG
KillerRed
Optogenetics
Phototoxicity
author_facet Andrew P. Wojtovich
Thomas H. Foster
author_sort Andrew P. Wojtovich
title Optogenetic control of ROS production
title_short Optogenetic control of ROS production
title_full Optogenetic control of ROS production
title_fullStr Optogenetic control of ROS production
title_full_unstemmed Optogenetic control of ROS production
title_sort optogenetic control of ros production
publisher Elsevier
series Redox Biology
issn 2213-2317
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) are known to cause oxidative damage to DNA, proteins and lipids. In addition, recent evidence suggests that ROS can also initiate signaling cascades that respond to stress and modify specific redox-sensitive moieties as a regulatory mechanism. This suggests that ROS are physiologically-relevant signaling molecules. However, these sensor/effector molecules are not uniformly distributed throughout the cell. Moreover, localized ROS damage may elicit site-specific compensatory measures. Thus, the impact of ROS can be likened to that of calcium, a ubiquitous second messenger, leading to the prediction that their effects are exquisitely dependent upon their location, quantity and even the timing of generation. Despite this prediction, ROS signaling is most commonly intuited through the global administration of chemicals that produce ROS or by ROS quenching through global application of antioxidants. Optogenetics, which uses light to control the activity of genetically-encoded effector proteins, provides a means of circumventing this limitation. Photo-inducible genetically-encoded ROS-generating proteins (RGPs) were originally employed for their phototoxic effects and cell ablation. However, reducing irradiance and/or fluence can achieve sub-lethal levels of ROS that may mediate subtle signaling effects. Hence, transgenic expression of RGPs as fusions to native proteins gives researchers a new tool to exert spatial and temporal control over ROS production. This review will focus on the new frontier defined by the experimental use of RGPs to study ROS signaling.
topic ROS signaling
Photodynamic therapy
miniSOG
KillerRed
Optogenetics
Phototoxicity
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213231714000342
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