Fluorescent Biosensors for Neuronal Metabolism and the Challenges of Quantitation
Publication information:
Dorothy Koveal, Carlos Manlio Díaz-García, and Gary Yellen. 2020. “Fluorescent Biosensors for Neuronal Metabolism and the Challenges of Quantitation”. Curr Opin Neurobiol, 63, Pp. 111-21. doi:10.1016/j.conb.2020.02.011
Abstract
Over the past decade, genetically encoded fluorescent biosensors that report metabolic changes have become valuable tools for understanding brain metabolism. These sensors have been targeted to specific brain regions and cell types in different organisms to track multiple metabolic processes at single cell (and subcellular) resolution. Here, we review genetically encoded biosensors used to study metabolism in the brain. We particularly focus on the principles needed to use these sensors quantitatively while avoiding false inferences from variations in sensor fluorescence that arise from differences in expression level or environmental influences such as pH or temperature.