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Method Article
We provide a protocol to stably knock down genes encoding extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in C2C12 myoblasts using small-hairpin (sh) RNA. Targeting ADAMTSL2 as an example, we describe the methods for the validation of the knockdown efficiency on the mRNA, protein, and cellular level during C2C12 myoblast to myotube differentiation.
Extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins are crucial for skeletal muscle development and homeostasis. The stable knockdown of genes coding for ECM proteins in C2C12 myoblasts can be applied to study the role of these proteins in skeletal muscle development. Here, we describe a protocol to deplete the ECM protein ADAMTSL2 as an example, using small-hairpin (sh) RNA in C2C12 cells. Following transfection of shRNA plasmids, stable cells were batch-selected using puromycin. We further describe the maintenance of these cell lines and the phenotypic analysis via mRNA expression, protein expression, and C2C12 differentiation. The advantages of the method are the relatively fast generation of stable C2C12 knockdown cells and the reliable differentiation of C2C12 cells into multinucleated myotubes upon depletion of serum in the cell culture medium. Differentiation of C2C12 cells can be monitored by bright field microscopy and by measuring the expression levels of canonical marker genes, such as MyoD, myogenin, or myosin heavy chain (MyHC) indicating the progression of C2C12 myoblast differentiation into myotubes. In contrast to the transient knockdown of genes with small-interfering (si) RNA, genes that are expressed later during C2C12 differentiation or during myotube maturation can be targeted more efficiently by generating C2C12 cells that stably express shRNA. Limitations of the method are a variability in the knockdown efficiencies, depending on the specific shRNA that may be overcome by using gene knockout strategies based on CRISPR/Cas9, as well as potential off-target effects of the shRNA that should be considered.
Extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins provide structural support for all tissues, mediate cell-cell communication, and determine cell fate. The formation and dynamic remodeling of ECM is thus critical to maintain tissue and organ homeostasis1,2. Pathological variants in several genes coding for ECM proteins give rise to musculoskeletal disorders with phenotypes ranging from muscular dystrophies to pseudomouscular build3,4. For example, pathogenic variants in ADAMTSL2 cause the extremely rare musculoskeletal disorder geleophysic dysplasia, which presents with pseudomuscular build, i.e., an apparent increase in skeletal muscle mass5. Together with gene expression data in mouse and humans, this suggests a role for ADAMTSL2 in skeletal muscle development or homeostasis6,7.
The protocol that we describe here was developed to study the mechanism by which ADAMTSL2 modulates skeletal muscle development and/or homeostasis in a cell culture setting. We stably knocked down ADAMTSL2 in the murine C2C12 myoblast cell line. C2C12 myoblasts and their differentiation into myotubes is a well-described and widely used cell culture model for skeletal muscle differentiation and skeletal muscle bioengineering8,9. C2C12 cells go through distinct differentiation steps after serum withdrawal, resulting in the formation of multinucleated myotubes after 3−10 days in culture. These differentiation steps can be reliably monitored by measuring mRNA levels of distinct marker genes, such as MyoD, myogenin, or myosin heavy chain (MyHC). One advantage of generating stable gene knockdowns in C2C12 cells is that genes that are expressed at later stages of C2C12 differentiation can be targeted more efficiently, compared to transient knockdown achieved by small-interfering (si) RNA, which typically lasts for 5−7 days after transfection, and is influenced by the transfection efficiency. A second advantage of the protocol as described here is the relatively fast generation of batches of C2C12 knockdown cells using puromycin selection. Alternatives, such as CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene knockout or the isolation of primary skeletal muscle cell precursors from human or target-gene deficient mice are technically more challenging or require the availability of patient muscle biopsies or target-gene deficient mice, respectively. However, similar to other cell culture based approaches, there are limitations in the use of C2C12 cells as model for skeletal muscle cell differentiation, such as the two-dimensional (2D) nature of the cell culture set-up and the lack of the in vivo microenvironment that is critical to maintain undifferentiated skeletal muscle precursor cells10.
1. Preparing the shRNA Plasmid DNA from Escherichia coli
2. Culturing and Transfection of C2C12 Cells and Puromycin Selection
3. Phenotypic Analysis of C2C12 Differentiation
NOTE: The methods described below can easily be adapted for general phenotypic analysis of C2C12 myoblast differentiation into myotubes by varying the specific antibodies used in Western blotting or the gene specific primers used in the quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) analysis.
Selection of puromycin-resistant C2C12 can be achieved in 10−14 days after transfection due to efficient elimination of non-resistant, i.e., untransfected cells (Figure 1B). Typically, more than 80% of the cells detach from the cell culture dish and these cells are removed during routine cell maintenance. Puromycin-resistant C2C12 cells expressing the control (scrambled) shRNA retain the spindle-shape, elongated cell morphology at low cell density and the capability to...
We describe here a protocol for the stable knockdown of ECM proteins in C2C12 myoblasts and for phenotypic analysis of the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes. Several factors determine the outcome of the experiment and need to be considered carefully. Maintaining C2C12 cells in the proliferating phase is a critical step to keep the C2C12 cells in the myoblast precursor state. Retaining the capability of C2C12 cells to consistently differentiate into myotubes depends on i) the passage number of the cells, ii...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
D.H. is supported by the National Institutes of Health (National Institute for Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, NIAMS, grant number AR070748) and seed funding from the Leni & Peter W. May Department of Orthopedics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Acetone | Fisher Chemical | 191784 | |
Agar | Fisher Bioreagents | BP1423 | |
Ampicillin | Fisher Bioreagents | BP1760-5 | |
Automated cell counter Countesse II | Invitrogen | A27977 | |
Bradford Reagent | Thermo Scientific | P4205987 | |
C2C12 cells | ATCC | CRL-1772 | |
Chamber slides | Invitrogen | C10283 | |
Chloroform | Fisher Chemical | 183172 | |
DMEM | GIBCO | 11965-092 | |
DMSO | Fisher Bioreagents | BP231-100 | |
DNase I (Amplification Grade) | Invitrogen | 18068015 | |
Fetal bovine serum | VWR | 97068-085 | |
GAPDH | EMD Millipore | MAB374 | |
Glycine | VWR Life Sciences | 19C2656013 | |
Goat-anti-mouse secondary antibody (IRDYE 800CW) | Li-Cor | C90130-02 | |
Goat-anti mouse secondary antibody (Rhodamine-red) | Jackson Immune Research | 133389 | |
HCl | Fisher Chemical | A144S | |
Incubator (Shaker) | Denville Scientific Corporation | 1704N205BC105 | |
Mercaptoethanol | Amresco, VWR Life Sciences | 2707C122 | |
Midiprep plasmid extraction kit | Qiagen | 12643 | |
Myosin 4 (myosin heavy chain) | Invitrogen | 14-6503-82 | |
Mounting medium | Invitrogen | 2086310 | |
NaCl | VWR Life Sciences | 241 | |
non-ionic surfactant/detergent | VWR Life Sciences | 18D1856500 | |
Paraformaldehyde | MP | 199983 | |
PBS | Fisher Bioreagents | BP399-4 | |
PEI | Polysciences | 23966-1 | |
Penicillin/streptomycin antibiotics | GIBCO | 15140-122 | |
Petridishes | Corning | 353003 | |
Polypropylene tubes | Fisherbrand | 149569C | |
Protease inhibitor cocktail tablets | Roche | 33576300 | |
Puromycin | Fisher Scientific | BP2956100 | |
PCR (Real Time) | Applied Biosystems | 4359284 | |
Reaction tubes | Eppendorf | 22364111 | |
Reverse Transcription Master Mix | Applied Biosystems | 4368814 | |
RIPA buffer | Thermo Scientific | TK274910 | |
sh control plasmid | Sigma-Aldrich | 07201820MN | |
sh 3086 plasmid | Sigma-Aldrich | TRCN0000092578 | |
sh 972 plasmid | Sigma-Aldrich | TRCN0000092579 | |
sh 1977 plasmid | Sigma-Aldrich | TRCN0000092582 | |
Spectrophotometer (Nanodrop) | Thermo Scientific | NanoDrop One C | |
SYBR Green Reagent Master Mix | Applied Biosystems | 743566 | |
Trichloroacetic acid | Acros Organics | 30145369 | |
Trizol reagent | Ambion | 254707 | |
Trypan blue | GIBCO | 15250-061 | |
Tryptone | Fisher Bioreagents | BP1421 | |
Trypsin EDTA 0.25% | Gibco-Life Technology Corporation | 2085459 | |
Water (DEPC treated and nuclease free) | Fisher Bioreagents | 186163 | |
Western blotting apparatus | Biorad | Mini Protean Tetra Cell | |
Yeast extract | Fisher Bioreagents | BP1422 |
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