The AVATar technology is still at an early development stage, so assessing its impact is still speculative. That said, our achievements from the first 2-year reporting period represent major progress for the field of brain imaging and understanding of molecular brain function in several ways:
1) The allosteric neurotransmitter-sensing AVATar we developed shows an unprecedented combination of detectability at low doses and sensitivity towards its target neurotransmitter. This paves the way towards fMRI detection of neurotransmitter release at physiological levels, which has not been possible with current technologies. Upcoming in vivo experiments will assess the full potential of AVATars for such applications.
2) Our progress in making AVATars genetically encodable and express them in situ through adeno-associated viruses facilitates brain-wide targeting and functionality of these probes. With this, we circumvent a major roadblock of existing molecular MRI probes, namely delivering sufficient doses of the probe into the brain in a non-disruptive and homogenous manner. Genetic encoding has been the key advantage of fluorescent sensors and was the main driver behind the massive success of GFP-derived tools. Still, in situ expression of molecular MRI sensors has not been achieved so far.
Together, these achievements will, address a major challenge in neuroscience: enabling imaging of neurotransmitters throughout the entire mammalian brain will address long-standing research questions into the fundamental role of long-range molecular signalling patterns in brain function.