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Method Article
* Wspomniani autorzy wnieśli do projektu równy wkład.
Using in ovo electroporation, we devised a method to selectively transfect the auditory inner ear and cochlear nucleus in chicken embryos to achieve a cell-group-specific knockdown of fragile X mental retardation protein during discrete periods of circuit assembly.
Fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) is an mRNA-binding protein that regulates local protein translation. FMRP loss or dysfunction leads to aberrant neuronal and synaptic activities in fragile X syndrome (FXS), which is characterized by intellectual disability, sensory abnormalities, and social communication problems. Studies of FMRP function and FXS pathogenesis have primarily been conducted with Fmr1 (the gene encoding FMRP) knockout in transgenic animals. Here we report an in vivo method for determining the cell-autonomous function of FMRP during the period of circuit assembly and synaptic formation using chicken embryos. This method employs stage-, site-, and direction-specific electroporation of a drug-inducible vector system containing Fmr1 small hairpin RNA (shRNA) and an EGFP reporter. With this method, we achieved selective FMRP knockdown in the auditory ganglion (AG) and in one of its brainstem targets, the nucleus magnocellularis (NM), thus providing a component-specific manipulation within the AG-NM circuit. Additionally, the mosaic pattern of the transfection allows within-animal controls and neighboring neuron/fiber comparisons for enhanced reliability and sensitivity in data analyzing. The inducible vector system provides temporal control of gene editing onset to minimize accumulating developmental effects. The combination of these strategies provides an innovative tool to dissect the cell-autonomous function of FMRP in synaptic and circuit development.
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by intellectual disability, sensory abnormalities, and autistic behaviors. In most cases, FXS is caused by a global loss of fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP; encoded by Fmr1 gene) starting at early embryonic stages1. FMRP is an RNA-binding protein that is normally expressed in most neurons and glial cells in the brain, as well as in sensory organs2,3,4. In mammalian brains, FMRP is likely associated with hundreds of mRNAs that encode proteins that are important for various neural activities5. Studies of conventional Fmr1 knockout animals demonstrated that FMRP expression is particularly important to the assembly and plasticity of synaptic neurotransmission6. Several conditional and mosaic knockout models have further demonstrated that FMRP actions and signals vary across brain regions, cell types, and synaptic sites during several developmental events including axonal projection, dendritic patterning, and synaptic plasticity7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14. Acute function of FMRP in regulating synaptic transmission was studied by intracellular delivery of inhibitory FMRP antibodies or FMRP itself in brain slices or cultured neurons15,16,17,18. These methods, however, do not offer the ability to track FMRP misexpression-induced consequences during development. Thus, developing in vivo methods to investigate the cell-autonomous functions of FMRP is in great need, and expected to help determine whether the reported anomalies in FXS patients are direct consequences of FMRP loss in the associated neurons and circuits, or secondary consequences derived from network-wide changes during development19.
The auditory brainstem of chicken embryos offers a uniquely advantageous model for in-depth functional analyses of FMRP regulation in circuit and synapse development. The easy access to embryonic chicken brains and the well-established in ovo electroporation technique for genetic manipulation have contributed greatly to our understanding of brain development at early embryonic stages. In a recently published study, this technique was combined with advanced molecular tools that allow temporal control of FMRP misexpression20,21. Here, the methodology is advanced to induce selective manipulations of presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons separately. This method was developed in the auditory brainstem circuit. Acoustic signal is detected by hair cells in the auditory inner ear and then conveyed to the auditory ganglion (AG; also called the spiral ganglion in mammals). Bipolar neurons in the AG innervate hair cells with their peripheral processes and in turn send a central projection (the auditory nerve) to the brainstem where they terminate in two primary cochlear nuclei, the nucleus magnocellularis (NM) and the nucleus angularis (NA). Neurons in the NM are structurally and functionally comparable to the spherical bushy cells of the mammalian anteroventral cochlear nucleus. Within the NM, auditory nerve fibers (ANFs) synapse on the somata of NM neurons via the large endbulb of Held terminals22. During development, NM neurons arise from rhombomeres 5 and 6 (r5/6) in the hindbrain23, while AG neurons are derived from neuroblasts residing in the otocyst24. Here, we describe the procedure to selectively knockdown FMRP expression in the presynaptic AG neurons and in the postsynaptic NM neurons separately.
Eggs and chicken embryos were handled with care and respect in accordance with the animal protocols approved by the Jinan University Animal Care and Use Committee.
1. Egg and plasmid preparation
2. In ovo electroporation
3. Administration of Dox to initiate and maintain plasmid transcription
4. Tissue dissection and sectioning
5. Immunostaining and microscope imaging
NOTE: Two types of immunostaining are performed depending on whether sections are mounted on slides or free-floating in PBS.
By performing in ovo electroporation at different sites and at different developmental stages, we achieved selective FMRP knockdown either in the auditory periphery or in the auditory brainstem.
FMRP knockdown in NM
Small hairpin RNA (shRNA) against the chicken Fmr1 was designed and cloned into the Tet-On vector system as described previously20. The setup for in ovo electroporation is shown in Figure...
To determine the cell-autonomous function of FMRP, manipulating its expression in individual cell groups or cell types is necessary. Since one of the major functions of FMRP is to regulate synaptic formation and plasticity, selectively manipulating each synaptic component of a certain circuit is prerequisite for a full understanding of FMRP mechanism in synaptic communication. Using in ovo electroporation of chicken embryos, we demonstrated a method to target FMRP expression in t...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This study was supported by: a National Natural Science Foundation of China grant (No. 32000697); the Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou (202102080139); the Guangdong Natural Science Foundation (2019A1515110625, 2021A1515010619); the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (11620324); a Research Grant of Key Laboratory of Regenerative Medicine, Ministry of Education, Jinan University (No. ZSYXM202107); the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China (21621054); and the Medical Scientific Research Foundation of Guangdong Province of China (20191118142729581). We thank the medical experimental center of Jinan University. We thank Dr. Terra Bradley for careful editing of the manuscript.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Egg incubation | |||
16 °C refrigerator | MAGAT | Used for fertilized egg storage. | |
Egg incubator | SHANGHAI BOXUN | GZX-9240MBE | |
Fertilized eggs | Farm of South China Agricultural University | Eggs must be used in one week for optimal viability. | |
Plasmid preparation | |||
Centrifuge | Sigma | 10016 | |
Fast green | Solarbio | G1661 | Make 0.1% working solution in distilled water and autoclave. |
Plasmid Maxi-prep kit | QIAGEN | 12162 | Dissolve plasmid DNA in Tris-EDTA (TE) buffer; endotoxin-free preparation kit |
Sodium Acetate | Sigma-Aldrich | S2889 | Make 7.5M working solution in nuclase-free water. |
Electroporation and Doxycycline Administration | |||
Electroporator | BTX | ECM399 | |
1 mL / 5 mL Syringe | GUANGZHOU KANGFULAI | ||
Dissecting microscope | CNOPTEC | SZM-42 | |
Doxcycline | Sigma-Aldrich | D9891 | Use fresh aliquots for each dose and store at -20 °C. |
Glass capillary | BEIBOBOMEI | RD0910 | 0.9-1.1 mm*100 mm |
Laboratory parafilm | PARAFILM | PM996 | transparent film |
Pipette puller | CHENGDU INSTRUMENT FACTORY | WD-2 | Pulling condition: 500 °C for 15 s |
Platinum elctrodes | Home made | 0.5 mm diameter, 1.5 mm interval. | |
Rubber tube | Sigma-Aldrich | A5177 | |
Tissue Dissection and Fixation | |||
Forceps | RWD | F11020-11 | Tip size: 0.05*0.01 mm |
Other surgery tools | RWD | ||
Paraformaldehyde | Sigma-Aldrich | 158127 | Freshly made 4% PFA solution in phosphate-buffered saline can be stored in 4 °C for up to 1 week. |
SYLGARD 184 Silicone Elastomer Kit | DOW | 01673921 | For black background plates, food-grade carbon powder is applied. |
Sectioning | |||
Cryostat | LEICA | CM1850 | |
Gelatin | Sigma-Aldrich | G9391 | From bovine skin. |
Sliding microtome | LEICA | SM2010 | |
Immunostaining | |||
Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-Mouse | Abcam | ab150113 | 1:500 dilution, RRID: AB_2576208 |
Alexa Fluor 555 goat anti-rabbit | Abcam | ab150078 | 1:500 dilution, RRID: AB_2722519 |
DAPI | Abcam | ab285390 | 1: 1000 dilution |
Fluoromount-G mounting medium | Southern Biotech | Sb-0100-01 | |
FMRP antibody | Y. Wang, Florida State University | #8263 | 1:1000 dilution, RRID: AB_2861242 |
Islet-1 antibody | DSHB | 39.3F7 | 1:100 dilution, RRID: AB_1157901 |
Netwell plate | Corning | 3478 | |
Neurofilament antibody | Sigma-Aldrich | N4142 | 1:1000 dilution, RRID: AB_477272 |
Parvalbumin antibody | Sigma-Aldrich | P3088 | 1:10000 dilution, RRID: AB_477329 |
SNAP25 antibody | Abcam | ab66066 | 1:1000 dilution, RRID: AB_2192052 |
Imaging | |||
Adobe photoshop | ADOBE | image editing software | |
Confocal microscope | LEICA | SP8 | |
Fluorescent stereomicroscope | OLYMPUS | MVX10 | |
Olympus Image-Pro Plus 7.0 | OlYMPUS | commercial image processing software package |
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