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This neural cell dissociation protocol is intended for samples with a low amount of starting material and yields a highly viable single-cell suspension for downstream analysis, with optional fixation and staining steps.
This neural dissociation protocol (an adaptation of the protocol accompanying a commercial adult brain dissociation kit) optimizes tissue processing in preparation for detailed downstream analysis such as flow cytometry or single-cell sequencing. Neural dissociation can be conducted via mechanical dissociation (such as using filters, chopping techniques, or pipette trituration), enzymatic digestion, or a combination thereof. The delicate nature of neuronal cells can complicate efforts to obtain the highly viable, true single-cell suspension with minimal cellular debris that is required for single-cell analysis. The data demonstrate that this combination of automated mechanical dissociation and enzymatic digestion consistently yields a highly viable (>90%) single-cell suspension, overcoming the aforementioned difficulties. While a few of the steps require manual dexterity, these steps lessen sample handling and potential cell loss. This manuscript details each step of the process to equip other laboratories to successfully dissociate small quantities of neural tissue in preparation for downstream analysis.
The hippocampus was first described by a Bolognese anatomist, Giulio Cesare Aranzio, in the 1500's1. In naming this newfound structure, Aranzio was likely inspired by its uncanny resemblance to the seahorse of the genus Hippocampus1. The hippocampus is involved in stress responses but is widely known for its role in learning and memory. More specifically, the hippocampus is responsible for the encoding and retrieval of declarative and spatial memory1.
The hippocampus, or hippocampus proper, is divided into the CA1 (cornu ammonis), CA2, and CA3 subfields1. Compared to the rest of the nervous system, the hippocampus has several unique defining characteristics, including its plasticity and potential for ongoing neurogenesis2. Neurogenesis is the process of the proliferation and differentiation of neural stem cells, followed by their integration into the pre-existing neuronal network. Neurogenesis is restricted to the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus and subventricular zone of the lateral ventricles (and the olfactory bulbs)3. While neurogenesis is abundant in embryogenesis, it is a lifelong process3,4. As such, this discussion will focus on adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus.
The subventricular and subgranular zones are neurogenic niches containing ependymal and vascular cells, as well as immature and mature lineages of neural stem cells5. Microglia contribute to these niches as immune cells to regulate neurogenesis6. Neural progenitor cells are nonstem cell progenies of neural stem cells7. Three types of neural progenitors are present in the subventricular zone: radial glia-like type B cells, type C transit-amplifying progenitors, and type A neuroblasts3,8. The slowly dividing type B neural progenitor cells in the subventricular zone can differentiate into rapidly dividing type C cells8. Subsequently, type C cells differentiate into type A cells8. These neuroblasts migrate through the rostral migratory stream to the olfactory bulb before differentiating into interneurons or oligodendrocytes9. These olfactory bulb interneurons are key to olfactory short-term memory, and associative learning, whereas the oligodendrocytes myelinate axons of the corpus callosum9. The majority of adult neurogenesis occurs in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus, where radial type 1 and nonradial type 2 neural progenitors are found3. Most neural progenitor cells are destined to become dentate granule neurons and astrocytes10. Connected by gap junctions, astrocytes form networks to modulate plasticity, synaptic activity, and neuronal excitability5. As the primary excitatory neuron of the dentate gyrus, granule cells provide input from the entorhinal cortex to the CA3 region11.
Neural stem cell populations can be isolated using immunomagnetic or immunofluorescent isolation strategies12,13. Neural tissue is particularly difficult to dissociate; efforts to do so often result in samples with poor cell viability and/ or fail to produce the necessary single-cell suspension for downstream analysis. Neural dissociation can be conducted via mechanical dissociation (such as using filters, chopping techniques, or pipette trituration), enzymatic digestion, or a combination of techniques14,15. In a study evaluating neural dissociation methods, the viability and quality of manual mechanical dissociation by pipette trituration versus combinations of pipette trituration and digestion with various enzymes were compared15. Quality was graded based on the amount of cell clumps and DNA or subcellular debris in the prepared suspension15. Suspensions of glial tumors subjected to manual mechanical dissociation alone had significantly lower cell viability than treatments with dispase or a combination of DNase, collagenase, and hyaluronidase15. Volovitz et al. acknowledged the variation in viability and quality between the different methods and emphasized that inadequate dissociation may reduce the accuracy of downstream analysis15.
In a separate study, the authors compared over 60 different methods and combinations of dissociation of cultured neuronal cells14. These methods included eight different variations of manual mechanical dissociation by pipette trituration, a comparison of incubation with five individual enzymes at three different intervals, and various combinations of mechanical dissociation with enzymatic digestion or the combination of two enzymes14. None of the mechanical methods yielded a single-cell suspension14. Four of the single enzyme treatments, ten of the combination enzymatic treatments, and four of the combinations of mechanical dissociation with enzymatic digestion yielded a single-cell suspension14. Enzymatic digestion with TrypLE followed by Trypsin-EDTA most effectively dissociated samples14. Incidentally, samples treated with TrypLE and/or Trypsin-EDTA tended to form gelatinous clumps14. While this study was performed on cultured cells, it speaks to the shortcomings of pipette trituration or enzymatic digestion alone.
Side-by-side comparisons of manual versus automated mechanical dissociation are lacking. However, one group ran flow cytometry to compare manual and semi-automated mechanical dissociation of whole mouse brains in conjunction with commercial papain or trypsin enzymatic dissociation kits16. Processing with the dissociator more consistently yielded viable cells16. Following dissociation, the authors also isolated Prominin-1 cells, neuronal precursor cells, and microglia16. For two of the three isolated cell populations, the purity of the isolated cells was slightly higher when samples were processed with the dissociator, as compared to manually16. Reiß et al. noted that person-to-person variability in pipetting technique hinders reproducibility of viable cell population yield in tissue dissociation16. The authors concluded that automated mechanical dissociation standardizes sample processing16.
The method of dissociation outlined in this manuscript is a combination of fully automated mechanical dissociation and enzymatic digestion, using solutions accompanying a commercial adult brain dissociation kit17. Unlike standard protocols, this optimized protocol reduces sample manipulation, yields a highly viable single-cell suspension, and is intended for processing minimal amounts of starting tissue.
Experiments were conducted in accordance with the ethical standards approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at UAMS. 6-month-old female C57Bl6/J wild-type mice were purchased and group-housed (4 mice per cage) under a constant 12 h light/dark cycle.
1. Preparation of reagents
2. Day of experiment
3. Perfusion
4. Dissection
5. Prepare Enzyme Mix 1 and 2 for each sample
NOTE: For volumes greater than 2 mL, use a 10 mL serologic pipette; for volumes, 200 µL-2 mL, use a 1000 µL pipette; for volumes, 21-199 µL, use a 200 µL pipette; for volumes, 2-20 µL, use a 20 µL pipette; for volumes under 2 µL, use a 0-2 µL pipette.
6. Adult brain dissociation protocol17
NOTE: When working with samples, tubes should be placed in a tube rack at room temperature while BSA and D-PBS remain on ice unless otherwise noted.
7. Debris removal
8. Cell count
9. Live/dead stain
10. Fixation (optional)
11. Flow cytometry
Samples were processed with a flow cytometer at a core facility, and the resulting data were evaluated with a software package for flow analysis. Previously, compensation controls were analyzed-the live/dead stain and negative control. If multiple fluorochromes are used, fluorescence minus one (FMO) controls and single-stain controls should be prepared for each antibody. Compensation for spectral overlap for the experimental samples was calculated based on the analyzed controls. For cell population identification, a hier...
Several steps in this neural dissociation protocol require proficient technique and dexterity–perfusion, supernatant aspiration, and myelin removal. Throughout the perfusion process, the internal organs must remain intact (aside from removing the diaphragm and clipping the heart); this includes avoiding the upper chambers of the heart with the butterfly needle. While the amount of saline with heparin needed varies, transparent fluid flowing from the heart indicates the process is complete. The brain must be complet...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Aimee Rogers for providing hands-on training and continued product support. We thank Dr. Amanda Burke for ongoing troubleshooting and clarifying discussions. We thank Meredith Joheim and the UAMS Science Communication Group for the grammatical editing and formatting of this manuscript. This study was supported by NIH R25GM083247 and NIH 1R01CA258673 (A.R.A).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
1.5 mL Microcentrifuge Tubes | Fisher Scientific | 02-682-003 | Basix, assorted color |
15 mL Falcon Tubes | Becton Dickinson Labware Europe | 352009 | Polystyrene |
25 mL Serological Pipets | Fisher Scientific | 14-955-235 | |
5 mL Round Bottom Polystyrene Test Tube | Falcon | 352052 | |
500 mL Vacuum Filter/ Storage Bottle System | Corning | 431097 | |
70 μm cell strainer | Fisher Scientific | 08-771-2 | |
Adult Brain Dissociation Kit | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-107-677 | Contains Enzyme P, Buffer Z, Buffer Y, Enzyme A, Buffer A, Debris Removal Solution |
Aluminum Foil | Fisher Scientific | 01-213-105 | |
Anti-ACSA-2-PE-Vio770, mouse, clone REA969 | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-116-246 | |
Anti-Myelin Basic Protein | Sigma-Aldrich | M3821-100UG | |
Anti-PSA-NCAM-PE, human, mouse and rat, Clone 2-2B | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-117-394 | |
BD LSRFortessa | BD | ||
BSA | Sigma-Aldrich | A7906-50G | |
CD11b-VioBlue, mouse, Clone REA592 | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-113-810 | |
CD31 Antibody | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-111-541 | |
Ceramic Hot Plate Stirrer | Fisher Scientific | 11-100-100SH | |
Dimethyl Sulfoxide | Fisher Scientific | BP231-100 | |
Ethanol | Pharmco by Greenfield Global | 111000200 | |
Falcon 50 mL Conical Centrifuge Tubes | Fisher Scientific | 14-432-22 | |
Fine Scissors - Sharp | Fine Science Tools | 14060-09 | Perfusion |
FlowJo | BD | (v10.7.0) | |
gentleMACS C Tubes | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-093-237 | |
gentleMACS Octo Dissociator with Heaters | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-096-427 | |
Gibco DPBS (1X) | ThermoFisher Scientific | 14190144 | |
Glass Beaker | Fisher Scientific | 02-555-25A | |
Heparin sodium | Fresenius Kabi | 504011 | |
LIVE/DEAD Fixable Aqua Dead Cell Stain Kit | ThermoFisher | L34965 | |
Magnetic Stir Bar | Fisher Scientific | 14-513-51 | |
Noyes Spring Scissors | Fine Science Tools | 15012-12 | Dissection |
Paraformaldehyde | Sigma-Aldrich | 441244-3KG | Prilled, 95% |
Pipette tips GP LTS 20 µL 960A/10 | Rainin | 30389270 | |
Pipette Tips GP LTS 250 µL 960A/10 | Rainin | 30389277 | |
Pipette tips RT LTS 1000 µL FL 768A/8 | Rainin | 30389213 | |
Rainin Pipet-Lite XLS (2, 20, 200, 1000 μL) | Rainin | 30386597 | |
RBXMO FITC XADS | Fisher Scientific | A16167 | |
Round Ice Bucket with Lid | Fisher Scientific | 07-210-129 | |
Round-Bottom Tubes with Cell Strainer Cap | Falcon | 100-0087 | |
S1 Pipet Fillers | ThermoFisher Scientific | 9541 | |
Spatula & Probe | Fine Science Tools | 10090-13 | Dissection & Perfusion |
Surflo Winged Infusion Set 23 G x 3/4" | Termuno | SV-23BLK | Butterfly needle |
Test Tube Rack | Fisher Scientific | 14-809-37 | |
Thermo Scientific Legend XTR Centrifuge | ThermoFisher | discontinued | Or other standard table top centrifuge |
Variable-Flow Peristaltic Pump | Fisher Scientific | 13-876-2 | Low-flow model |
VetFlo Starter Kit for Mice | Kent Scientific | VetFlo-MSEKIT | Anesthesia mask, tubing, induction chamber, charcoal canisters |
VetFlo Vaporizer Single Channel Anesthesia System | Kent Scientific | VetFlo-1210S | 0.2–4 LPM |
Vi-CELL XR Cell Viability Analyzer | Beckman Coulter Life Sciences | 731196 | Cell Counting |
Vi-CELL XR 4 Bags of Sample Vials | Beckman Coulter Life Sciences | 383721 | Cell Counting |
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