Hegemann's research into light-gated
ion transport began in his PhD years, when he investigated the structure and function of
halorhodopsin, an
active ion transporter found in a type of
archaea called
haloarchaea that uses light energy to move
chloride ions against the gradient. As part of his PhD project, he characterized this protein in
Halobacterium salinarum, discovering that yellow light activates halorhodopsin. When halorhodopsin is expressed in
neurons and activated by light, the influx of chloride ions shifts the neuron to more negative
electric potential, preventing
action potential generation and inactivating the neurons. A 1984 article by Kenneth W. Foster of
Syracuse University suggested that
rhodopsins would also serve as light detector in the
green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. This also prompted Hegemann to spend a year with Foster as a
postdoctoral fellow. Hegemann continued characterizing this rhodopsin after returning to Germany. Working on another green alga, he found that it had a fast electrical response (by ion movement through
ion channel) to light stimulation, and proposed that the ion channel and the light-detecting rhodopsin were one single
protein complex. In 2002, collaborating with
Georg Nagel and
Ernst Bamberg, Hegemann made the landmark identification of the
gene for this rhodopsin and named it
Channelrhodopsin-1. The team identified the second
channelrhodopsin gene,
Channelrhodopsin-2, the next year. In both studies, they cloned the genes from
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and expressed them in the
oocytes of
African clawed frog. Upon blue light stimulation, electrical currents was detected in the oocytes. When channelrhodopsins are expressed in neurons and stimulated, the ion channel opens so
positively charged calcium and
sodium ions can enter the neurons, creating a more positive electric potential inside the neurons and activating them. This is the opposite effect of halorhodopsin activation. The field of
optogenetics took off from these discoveries. In 2005, Hegemann reported expressing channelrhodopsin in chicken
embryos, their movement can be controlled with light stimulation. This came in the same year as another study by a collaboration between
Karl Deisseroth,
Edward Boyden,
Feng Zhang, Georg Nagel and Ernst Bamberg, which found light could lead to action potential in cultured neurons expressing channelrhodopsin. == Honours and awards ==