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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Gaub is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Gaub.


Nature Neuroscience | 2013

Optical control of metabotropic glutamate receptors

Joshua Levitz; Carlos Pantoja; Benjamin Gaub; Harald Janovjak; Andreas Reiner; Adam Hoagland; David Schoppik; Brian Kane; Philipp Stawski; Alexander F. Schier; Dirk Trauner; Ehud Y. Isacoff

G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest family of membrane signaling proteins, respond to neurotransmitters, hormones and small environmental molecules. The neuronal function of many GPCRs has been difficult to resolve because of an inability to gate them with subtype specificity, spatial precision, speed and reversibility. To address this, we developed an approach for opto-chemical engineering of native GPCRs. We applied this to the metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) to generate light-agonized and light-antagonized mGluRs (LimGluRs). The light-agonized LimGluR2, on which we focused, was fast, bistable and supported multiple rounds of on/off switching. Light gated two of the primary neuronal functions of mGluR2: suppression of excitability and inhibition of neurotransmitter release. We found that the light-antagonized tool LimGluR2-block was able to manipulate negative feedback of synaptically released glutamate on transmitter release. We generalized the optical control to two additional family members: mGluR3 and mGluR6. This system worked in rodent brain slices and in zebrafish in vivo, where we found that mGluR2 modulated the threshold for escape behavior. These light-gated mGluRs pave the way for determining the roles of mGluRs in synaptic plasticity, memory and disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Restoration of visual function by expression of a light-gated mammalian ion channel in retinal ganglion cells or ON-bipolar cells

Benjamin Gaub; Michael H. Berry; Amy Holt; Andreas Reiner; Michael A. Kienzler; Natalia Dolgova; Sergei S. Nikonov; Gustavo D. Aguirre; William A. Beltran; John G. Flannery; Ehud Y. Isacoff

Significance We restored visual function to animal models of human blindness using a chemical compound that photosensitizes a mammalian ion channel. Virus-mediated expression of this light sensor in surviving retinal cells of blind mice restored light responses in vitro, reanimated innate light avoidance, and enabled learned visually guided behavior. The treatment also restored light responses to the retina of blind dogs. Patients that might benefit from this treatment would need to have intact ganglion cell and nerve fiber layers. In general, these are patients diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa and some forms of Leber congenital amaurosis. Patients diagnosed with other types of blindness, for example, age-related macular degeneration or diabetic retinopathy, would not be candidates for this treatment. Most inherited forms of blindness are caused by mutations that lead to photoreceptor cell death but spare second- and third-order retinal neurons. Expression of the light-gated excitatory mammalian ion channel light-gated ionotropic glutamate receptor (LiGluR) in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) of the retina degeneration (rd1) mouse model of blindness was previously shown to restore some visual functions when stimulated by UV light. Here, we report restored retinal function in visible light in rodent and canine models of blindness through the use of a second-generation photoswitch for LiGluR, maleimide-azobenzene-glutamate 0 with peak efficiency at 460 nm (MAG0460). In the blind rd1 mouse, multielectrode array recordings of retinal explants revealed robust and uniform light-evoked firing when LiGluR-MAG0460 was targeted to RGCs and robust but diverse activity patterns in RGCs when LiGluR-MAG0460 was targeted to ON-bipolar cells (ON-BCs). LiGluR-MAG0460 in either RGCs or ON-BCs of the rd1 mouse reinstated innate light-avoidance behavior and enabled mice to distinguish between different temporal patterns of light in an associative learning task. In the rod-cone dystrophy dog model of blindness, LiGluR-MAG0460 in RGCs restored robust light responses to retinal explants and intravitreal delivery of LiGluR and MAG0460 was well tolerated in vivo. The results in both large and small animal models of photoreceptor degeneration provide a path to clinical translation.


Molecular Therapy | 2015

Optogenetic Vision Restoration Using Rhodopsin for Enhanced Sensitivity

Benjamin Gaub; Michael H. Berry; Amy Holt; Ehud Y. Isacoff; John G. Flannery

Retinal disease is one of the most active areas of gene therapy, with clinical trials ongoing in the United States for five diseases. There are currently no treatments for patients with late-stage disease in which photoreceptors have been lost. Optogenetic gene therapies are in development, but, to date, have suffered from the low light sensitivity of microbial opsins, such as channelrhodopsin and halorhodopsin, and azobenzene-based photoswitches. Several groups have shown that photoreceptive G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) can be expressed heterologously, and photoactivate endogenous Gi/o signaling. We hypothesized such a GPCR could increase sensitivity due to endogenous signal amplification. We targeted vertebrate rhodopsin to retinal ON-bipolar cells of blind rd1 mice and observed restoration of: (i) light responses in retinal explants, (ii) visually-evoked potentials in visual cortex in vivo, and (iii) two forms of visually-guided behavior: innate light avoidance and discrimination of temporal light patterns in the context of fear conditioning. Importantly, both the light responses of the retinal explants and the visually-guided behavior occurred reliably at light levels that were two to three orders of magnitude dimmer than required for channelrhodopsin. Thus, gene therapy with native light-gated GPCRs presents a novel approach to impart light sensitivity for visual restoration in a useful range of illumination.


IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 2015

A device for human ultrasonic echolocation

Jascha Sohl-Dickstein; Santani Teng; Benjamin Gaub; Chris C. Rodgers; Crystal Li; Michael R. DeWeese; Nicol S. Harper

Objective: We present a device that combines principles of ultrasonic echolocation and spatial hearing to provide human users with environmental cues that are 1) not otherwise available to the human auditory system, and 2) richer in object and spatial information than the more heavily processed sonar cues of other assistive devices. The device consists of a wearable headset with an ultrasonic emitter and stereo microphones with affixed artificial pinnae. The goal of this study is to describe the device and evaluate the utility of the echoic information it provides. Methods: The echoes of ultrasonic pulses were recorded and time stretched to lower their frequencies into the human auditory range, then played back to the user. We tested performance among naive and experienced sighted volunteers using a set of localization experiments, in which the locations of echo-reflective surfaces were judged using these time-stretched echoes. Results: Naive subjects were able to make laterality and distance judgments, suggesting that the echoes provide innately useful information without prior training. Naive subjects were generally unable to make elevation judgments from recorded echoes. However, trained subjects demonstrated an ability to judge elevation as well. Conclusion: This suggests that the device can be used effectively to examine the environment and that the human auditory system can rapidly adapt to these artificial echolocation cues. Significance: Interpreting and interacting with the external world constitutes a major challenge for persons who are blind or visually impaired. This device has the potential to aid blind people in interacting with their environment.


Nature Communications | 2018

Author Correction: Restoration of patterned vision with an engineered photoactivatable G protein-coupled receptor

Michael H. Berry; Amy Holt; Joshua Levitz; Johannes Broichhagen; Benjamin Gaub; Meike Visel; Cherise Stanley; Krishan Aghi; Yang Joon Kim; Kevin Cao; Richard H. Kramer; Dirk Trauner; John G. Flannery; Ehud Y. Isacoff

Kevin J. Cao and Richard H. Kramer, who developed extended release with beta cyclodextrin, were inadvertently omitted from the author list and author contributions section of this Article. These errors have now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Optochemical control of genetically engineered neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

Ivan Tochitsky; Matthew R. Banghart; Alexandre Mourot; Jennifer Z. Yao; Benjamin Gaub; Richard H. Kramer; Dirk Trauner


Nature Communications | 2017

Restoration of patterned vision with an engineered photoactivatable G protein-coupled receptor

Michael H. Berry; Amy Holt; Joshua Levitz; Johannes Broichhagen; Benjamin Gaub; Meike Visel; Cherise Stanley; Krishan Aghi; Yang Joon Kim; Dirk Trauner; John G. Flannery; Ehud Y. Isacoff


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Restoring visual function in blind mice and dogs with an improved 2nd generation azobenzene based photoswitch

Benjamin Gaub; Michael H. Berry; Andreas Reiner; Michael A. Kienzler; Natalia Dolgova; Sergei S. Nikonov; Gustavo D. Aguirre; William A. Beltran; John G. Flannery; Ehud Y. Isacoff


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013

Vision Restoration in Mouse Models of RP using Light-Gated G-Protein Coupled Receptors

Benjamin Gaub; Michael H. Berry; Joshua Levitz; John G. Flannery; Ehud Y. Isacoff


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Optical Control of Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors for Probing of G Protein Signaling and Receptor Activation Mechanism

Josh Levitz; Benjamin Gaub; Harald Janovjak; Philipp Stawski; Dirk Trauner; Ehud Y. Isacoff

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Joshua Levitz

University of California

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Amy Holt

University of California

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Andreas Reiner

University of California

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Harald Janovjak

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Meike Visel

University of California

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