Mammalian cells can be engineered to incorporate light-responsive elements that reliably sense stimulation by light and activate endogenous pathways, such as the cAMP or Ca2+ pathway, to control gene expression. Light-inducible gene expression systems offer high spatiotemporal resolution, and are also traceless, reversible, tunable, and inexpensive. Melanopsin, a well-known representative of the animal opsins, is a G-protein-coupled receptor that triggers a Gαq-dependent signaling cascade upon activation with blue light (≈470 nm). Here, we describe how to rewire melanopsin activation by blue light to transgene expression in mammalian cells, with detailed instructions for constructing a 96-LED array platform with multiple tunable parameters for illumination of the engineered cells in multiwell plates.
Keywords: Cell engineering; Inducible gene expression; Mammalian cells; Optogenetics; Synthetic biology.