Other recent news:

08 March 2010 - Japan’s KDDI selects ADVA Optical Networking to deliver highly reliable Managed WDM Service

27 February 2010 - ADVA Optical Networking introduces integrated Fiber-Plant Analysis and Monitoring

25 February 2010 - OSA and APS Highlight the History and Future of Laser Technology

18 February 2010 - Laser pioneers and Nobel Laureates honored at LaserFest event

12 February 2010 - Scientists Turn Light Into Electrical Current Using a Golden Nanoscale System

04 February 2010 - MIT researchers build first germanium laser

03 February 2010 - New open-access journal SPIE Reviews begins publication

29 January 2010 - Engineers develop cancer-targeting nanoprobe sensors

27 January 2010 - Novel fluorescent probe for optical imaging and measurement of synaptic activity in the brain

24 January 2010 - Photonics West opens with strong first day in San Francisco

22 January 2010 - Visual Optics Research - Optical acceleration cancellation

20 January 2010 - OSA to Launch New Journal: Biomedical Optics Express

17 January 2010 - Tying light in knots

13 January 2010 - OFC/NFOEC 2010 to be Dedicated to Nobel Prize Winner and Industry Pioneer Charles Kao

06 January 2010 - Neuroengineers silence brain cells with multiple colours of light

Novel fluorescent probe for optical imaging and measurement of synaptic activity in the brain

Columbia University researchers have developed a novel fluorescent probe for optical imaging and measurement of synaptic activity in the brain.

Born of the need for a tool that would permit direct visualization of neurotransmitter release and uptake, and measurement of synaptic activity, the laboratories of Dalibor Sames, PhD, an associate professor in Columbia’s Department of Chemistry, and David Sulzer, PhD, a professor of neurobiology at Columbia University Medical Center, collaborated to create several Fluorescent False Neurotransmitters (FFNs), a class of highly efficient optical imaging probes that light up sufficiently enough to provide resolution at the individual synaptic level but at concentrations that do not interfere with normal synaptic function.

It’s well-known that memory, decision making and learning require activation and modification of synapses in the brain. This synaptic transmission involves the accumulation of neurotransmitters in vesicles within the cytoplasm of the pre-synaptic neuron; neurotransmitters are then released when the vesicle fuses with the plasma membrane of the cell.
synapse

Previous ways of imaging neurotransmitters have allowed researchers to measure post-synaptic neuronal activity and to observe the vesicle-membrane fusion process but, until now, it has not been possible to observe actual neurotransmitter release from individual synapses.

Columbia, together with Ascent Scientific, have now entered into a license agreement for an FFN designated 511, which promises to help scientists illuminate the mechanisms that may underlie mental illnesses and neuropathologies.

In a recent Science publication, Dr. Sames and his colleagues described a new form of synaptic plasticity, revealed by FFN511, where individual dopaminergic synapses respond differently to stimulus frequency (which emulates brain activity). FFN511 enabled the team to acquire optical measurements of presynaptic changes, at a spatial resolution up to one micromolar, that were simply not possible to achieve with existing probes or electrophysiological methods.

We believe that FFN511 has the potential to become an essential research tool for neuroscientists studying the synaptic transmission of dopamine as well as for drug discovery efforts seeking to identify improved blockers and enhancers of dopamine transporter activity,” Dr. Sulzer said.

Blocking of dopamine active transport proteins has been shown to ameliorate symptoms in pre-clinical models of Parkinson’s Disease, and drugs that target dopamine transporters and receptors are used to treat ADHD, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.
Sulzer

This groundbreaking tool provides a means for scientists to optically measure important presynaptic processes at the synaptic terminal level of discrete neurons,” said Steve Roome, Commercial Director for Ascent Scientific.
We are delighted to be the first commercial supplier to bring FFN511 to the life sciences community.

Broadly, FFNs provide a means of characterizing neurotransmitter release at the level of individual synapses, even on the same neuron. This capability is very important for understanding how the nervous system activates specific pathways and actions, and how it is altered by learning and development,” explained Beth Kauderer of Columbia Technology Ventures, the technology licensing office of Columbia University.

We expect that FFNs will be useful for both fundamental and applied neurobiology research, across a wide range of areas including learning, neurodegeneration and drug addiction,” said Kauderer.

Source: Colombia University (USA), Press Release.
Date: 27 January 2010