A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.
Method Article
This article describes an approach to microdissect zebrafish retinas with and without retinal pigment epithelium attached, from one to three days postfertilization embryos.
Part 1: Preparations before microdissection
Part 2: Dissection - brain removal and eye exposure1
Part 3A: Retinal dissection1
Part 3B: RPE-attached retinal dissection3
Part 4: Tissue sample collection for RNA work
Representative Results
Figure 1. (A) Lateral and (A') dorsal view of a zebrafish larval head at 52 hpf before dissection. (A") The corresponding histological section of the larval head in (A) & (A'). (B) Lateral and (B') dorsal view of a dissected retina at 54 hpf. The surface of retina was intact from both lateral and dorsal views. (B") The corresponding histological section of the dissected retina in (B) & (B'). The structure of the retina and retinal lamination was intact. In particular, the extracellular matrix between the photoreceptor layer and RPE (A", arrows) was well preserved in the dissected retina (B", arrows). (C) Lateral and (C') medial view of a dissected RPE-attached retina at 52 hpf. RPE layer was intact and continuous, which was also indicated by the histological section of the dissected tissue (C"). The white area in C' is the optic nerve (arrow). For histology, tissue samples were collected and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde. Plastic embedding and sectioning of these samples were performed as described3. Scale bar = 50 μm.
Microdissection of zebrafish eye tissues can effectively obtain intact retinas and RPE-attached retinas. This substantially assists expression studies pertaining to a specific eye tissue (i.e. retina or RPE). In fact, we have successfully utilized these procedures to obtain RNA expression profiles of the whole retina1 and RPE3. The utility of these profiles is strongly supported by our recent identification of pathways and gene families that are perturbed in a retinal differentiation mutant2
Experiments on animals were performed in accordance with the guidelines and regulations set forth by Purdue Animal Care and Use Committee.
This work is supported by a startup fund from the Department of Biological Sciences at Purdue University.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Cordless pestle motor | VWR international | 47747-370 | |
DC power supply | Lascar | PSU130 | Any DC supply would work. The specific voltage of a different machine will need further optimization. |
Disposable pestle & microtube, 1.5 mL (DNase, RNase and pyrogen-free) | VWR international | 47747-366 | These are used for tissue collection in TRIzol for expression analysis. |
Dumont #5 forceps, Tips: 0.05 x 0.01mm, Inox | World Precision Instruments, Inc. | 500341 | Fine tip dimension is desirable but is not inflexible, as one may need to sharpen the tip from time to time. |
Dumont #5SF forceps, Tips: 0.025 x 0.005mm, Inox | Fine Science Tools | 11252-00 | Fine tip dimension is desirable but is not inflexible, as one may need to sharpen the tip from time to time. |
Falcon polystyrene culture plates, 60 X 15 mm | BD Biosciences | 351007 | These plates are used as dissection plates. |
Olympus SZX16 Stereomicroscope | Olympus Corporation | SZX16 | Any stereomicroscope would work. We used Leica stereomicroscope in previous studies1-3 without any issues. We also use the 1X objective exclusively for the dissection even though we have a 2X objective installed. |
Sharpening stone | Fine Science Tools | 29008-01 | Use this to sharpen the tip of the forceps if necessary |
Thermo plate | Tokai Hit | MATS-U55SZX2B | This is used to maintain the temperature of the tissue throughout dissection and minimize the influence of temperature fluctuation on gene expression. We also put the whole microscope in an environmentally controlled room at 28°C during dissection in previous studies1-3 with good success. |
Trizol, 100 mL | Invitrogen | 15596-026 | |
tungsten wire, 0.015 inch diameter | World Precision Instruments, Inc. | TGW1510 | |
Wooden Applicator | Puritan | 807 | This is used for holding the chemically-etched tungsten needle. |
Request permission to reuse the text or figures of this JoVE article
Request PermissionThis article has been published
Video Coming Soon
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved