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CaBLAM! A High-contrast Bioluminescent Ca Indicator Derived from an Engineered Luciferase

Abstract

Ca plays many critical roles in cell physiology and biochemistry, leading researchers to develop a number of fluorescent small molecule dyes and genetically encodable probes that optically report changes in Ca concentrations in living cells. Though such fluorescence-based genetically encoded Ca indicators (GECIs) have become a mainstay of modern Ca sensing and imaging, bioluminescence-based GECIs-probes that generate light through oxidation of a small-molecule by a luciferase or photoprotein-have several distinct advantages over their fluorescent counterparts. Bioluminescent tags do not photobleach, do not suffer from nonspecific autofluorescent background, and do not lead to phototoxicity since they do not require the extremely bright extrinsic excitation light typically required for fluorescence imaging, especially with 2-photon microscopy. Current BL GECIs perform poorly relative to fluorescent GECIs, producing small changes in bioluminescence intensity due to high baseline signal at resting Ca concentrations and suboptimal Ca affinities. Here, we describe the development of a new bioluminescent GECI, "CaBLAM," which displays much higher contrast (dynamic range) than previously described bioluminescent GECIs and has a Ca affinity suitable for capturing physiological changes in cytosolic Ca concentration. Derived from a new variant of luciferase with superior in vitro properties and a highly favorable scaffold for insertion of sensor domains, CaBLAM allows for single-cell and subcellular resolution imaging of Ca dynamics at high frame rates in cultured neurons and . CaBLAM marks a significant milestone in the GECI timeline, enabling Ca recordings with high spatial and temporal resolution without perturbing cells with intense excitation light.

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