Enabling optical control over biological processes is a defining goal of the new field of optogenetics. Control of membrane voltage by natural rhodopsin family ion channels has found widespread acceptance in neuroscience, due to the fact that these natural proteins control membrane voltage without further engineering. In contrast, optical control of intracellular biological processes has been a fragmented effort, with various laboratories engineering light-responsive properties into proteins in different manners. In the present article, we review the various systems that have been developed for controlling protein functions with light based on vertebrate rhodopsins, plant photoregulatory proteins and, most recently, the photoswitchable fluorescent protein Dronpa. By allowing biology to be controlled with spatiotemporal specificity and tunable dynamics, light-controllable proteins will find applications in the understanding of cellular and organismal biology and in synthetic biology.
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October 2013
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Conference Article|
September 23 2013
Optobiology: optical control of biological processes via protein engineering
Benjamin Kim;
Benjamin Kim
*Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
†Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
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Michael Z. Lin
*Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
†Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, U.S.A.
1To whom correspondence should be addressed (email mzlin@stanford.edu).
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Biochem Soc Trans (2013) 41 (5): 1183–1188.
Article history
Received:
July 19 2013
Citation
Benjamin Kim, Michael Z. Lin; Optobiology: optical control of biological processes via protein engineering. Biochem Soc Trans 1 October 2013; 41 (5): 1183–1188. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST20130150
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