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Nature Methods 5, 87–93 (1 January 2008) | doi:10.1038/nmeth1144

Tracking transmitter-gated P2X cation channel activation in vitro and in vivo

Esther Richler , Severine Chaumont , Eiji Shigetomi , Alvaro Sagasti & Baljit S Khakh

We present a noninvasive approach to track activation of ATP-gated P2X receptors and potentially other transmitter-gated cation channels that show calcium fluxes. We genetically engineered rat P2X receptors to carry calcium sensors near the channel pore and tested this as a reporter for P2X2 receptor opening. The method has several advantages over previous attempts to image P2X channel activation by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET): notably, it reports channel opening rather than a conformation change in the receptor protein. Our FRET-based imaging approach can be used as a general method to track, in real time, the location, regional expression variation, mobility and activation of transmitter-gated P2X channels in living neurons in vitro and in vivo. This approach should help to determine when, where and how different receptors are activated during physiological processes.