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In This Article

  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Protocol
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Disclosures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Materials
  • References
  • Reprints and Permissions

Summary

This work develops an antibody uptake assay for imaging intra-lineage Notch/DeltaD signaling in dividing radial glia progenitors of the embryonic zebrafish brain.

Abstract

Asymmetric cell division (ACD), which produces two daughter cells of different fates, is fundamental for generating cellular diversity. In the developing organs of both invertebrates and vertebrates, asymmetrically dividing progenitors generates a Notchhi self-renewing and a Notchlo differentiating daughter. In the embryonic zebrafish brain, radial glia progenitors (RGPs)-the principal vertebrate neural stem cells-mostly undergo ACD to give birth to one RGP and one differentiating neuron. The optical clarity and easy accessibility of zebrafish embryos make them ideal for in vivo time-lapse imaging to directly visualize how and when the asymmetry of Notch signaling is established during ACD. Recent studies have shown that dynamic endocytosis of the Notch ligand DeltaD plays a crucial role in cell fate determination during ACD, and the process is regulated by the evolutionarily conserved polarity regulator Par-3 (also known as Pard3) and the dynein motor complex. To visualize the in vivo trafficking patterns of Notch signaling endosomes in mitotic RGPs, we have developed this antibody uptake assay. Using the assay, we have uncovered the dynamicity of DeltaD-containing endosomes during RGP division.

Introduction

Notch signaling controls cell fate decision and patterning during development in metazoans1, and recent studies have shown that Notch signaling in stem cell division mainly depends on endocytic trafficking2,3. Endocytosed Notch/Delta can activate Notch signaling in the nucleus and enhance the transcription of Notch target genes4,5,6. Directional Notch/Delta endosomal trafficking was first observed in Drosophila sensory organ precursor (SOP) cells during its asymmetric cell division (ACD), resulting in a higher Notch signaling activity in pIIa than in pIIb7,8. Antibody uptake assays with anti-Delta and anti-Notch antibodies have been applied to monitor the endocytic process in mitotic SOP cells. Notch/DeltaD endosomes move along with a kinesin motor protein to the central spindle during cytokinesis, and are asymmetrically translocated into the pIIa cell due to the antiparallel array of the asymmetric central spindle at the last moment of cell division3,8. These studies have shed light on the molecular mechanisms regulating asymmetric division in Drosophila SOP cells, but it is unclear whether similar endocytic processes occur in vertebrate radial glia progenitors (RGPs).

Moreover, the molecular mechanisms that regulate asymmetric Notch/DeltaD signaling during vertebrate RGP division are not well understood. In zebrafish, it has been reported that the interaction of Notch and Delta facilitates the endocytosis of the DeltaD ligand9. It is unknown whether DeltaD endocytosis can impact the cell fate choice of daughter cells in the developing vertebrate brain. Recent studies show injecting fluorescently conjugated anti-DeltaD antibodies into the neural tube could label Sara endosomes specifically in neuroepithelial cells, and anti-DeltaD containing Sara endosomes preferentially segregate into proliferating daughter cells10. It has been suggested that Notch signaling from the endosomes could regulate daughter cell fate. Previous results have shown that most zebrafish RGP cells in the developing forebrain undergo ACD, and the daughter cell fate determination is dependent on intralineage Notch/DeltaD signaling11. In order to elucidate the nature of the intralineage Notch/DeltaD signaling in zebrafish RGPs, we have developed the anti-DeltaD antibody uptake assay in the zebrafish developing brain. Using this protocol, we have successfully performed live labeling and imaging of DeltaD endocytic trafficking in mitotic RGPs.

The fluorescently labeled anti-DeltaD-antibody is efficiently internalized into the RGPs along the forebrain ventricle. It has greatly facilitated the discovery of directional trafficking of DeltaD endosomes in the asymmetrically dividing RGPs12,13. Compared to previous antibody uptake protocols developed for Drosophila notum cultures and the zebrafish spinal cord10, this protocol has achieved long-lasting and highly efficient anti-DeltaD labeling in the brain ventricle cell layer, specifically with less than 10 nL of microinjected antibody mixture. The hindbrain ventricle injection is very convenient for applying the antibody uptake assay in the developing brain, as the hindbrain ventricle is well expanded in zebrafish embryos and filled up with cerebrospinal fluid at early development stage14. By injecting the antibody mixture into the hindbrain ventricle without injuring any crucial developing tissues, the protocol has minimized possible damage to the imaging zone in the forebrain as much as possible. The reduced dosage of the injected primary antibody has also avoided potential side-effects of interfering with endogenous Delta-Notch signaling in vivo. This protocol can be easily combined with other pharmacological or genetic perturbations, utilized at different developmental stages, and possibly adapted to the adult brain as well as human pluripotent stem cell-derived 2D/3D brain organoids. Taken together, the protocol has made it possible to understand how and when Notch signaling asymmetry is established during ACD. The main challenge for successful implementation of this protocol is to achieve precise delivery of appropriate concentrations of the antibody based on specific experimental conditions.

Protocol

We have used the AB wild type line and transgenic line Tg [ef1a:Myr-Tdtomato] for the study. All animal experiments were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) at the University of California, San Francisco, USA (Approval Number: AN179000).

1. Preparation of zebrafish embryos

  1. Set up fish crossing tanks in the afternoon before 5:00 p.m., with one female wild-type fish and one male Tg [ef1a:Myr-Tdtomato] fish by using dividers to separate them in each tank.
  2. Remove the dividers before 11:00 a.m. from all crossing tanks the next morning. Keep quiet and do not disturb the fish while they are mating. Spawning typically occurs within 30 min after removing the dividers. The fertilized eggs remain on the bottom of the tank.
    1. Collect fertilized eggs from the tanks with a mesh filter. Transfer the eggs by washing them off into a Petri dish full of egg water and examine the embryos under a dissecting microscope at a 10x to 20x magnification.
  3. Transfer the fertilized embryos to a clean Petri dish containing approximately 20 mL of embryo medium (100 mL of 1,000x stock solution contains 29.4 g of NaCl, 1.27 g of KCl, 4.85 g of CaCl2.2H2O, and 8.13 g of MgSO4.7H2O) with large-bore glass Pasteur pipettes. Keep the embryos at 28 °C. Keep 50 fertilized embryos per Petri dish with 30 mL of embryo medium at 28.5 °C.
    ​NOTE: One pair of fish normally produces 100-300 embryos, and the fertilization and survival rate of healthy embryos is over 95% for each mating.
  4. The next morning, take the embryos out of the incubator at 8:00 a.m., when the embryos have reached the developmental stage of ~18-20 h post-fertilization (hpf). Observe them under an epifluorescence microscope at a 20x magnification, using white light at first. At that time, the zebrafish embryos are at the 20 somite stage.
    1. Discard dead embryos that are cloudy or ruptured under the microscope using a glass pipette.
  5. Turn on the fluorescent lamp and choose the RFP filter setting of the microscope. Then, select the embryos with strong red fluorescence and transfer them to a new dish with egg water.
    1. Dechorionate the embryos manually with two fine forceps (the tips of forceps should be sharp and undamaged) under white light (Table of Materials).
    2. Hold the chorion with one pair of forceps and make a tear in the chorion with the other forceps. Open the tear carefully using the forceps, and make it large enough for the embryo to pass through by gently pushing the embryo with the tips of the other forceps.
  6. Transfer the dechorionated embryos to a new Petri dish with fresh embryonic medium for a quick rinse before microinjection.

2. Preparation of microinjection

  1. Use the capillaries (1.2 mm OD, 0.9 mm ID, with filament) for pulling fine injection needles on a puller. Design and optimize the pulling program according to the handbook.
  2. Open the tip of the needle with forceps under a stereo dissection microscope. Make the diameter of the tip around 10 µm, and the taper angle around 30°.
  3. Conjugate the mouse monoclonal anti-Dld antibody with the anti-Mouse-IgG-Atto647N before injection.
    1. For each injection experiment, mix 0.5 µL of the anti-Dld antibody (0.5 mg/mL) with 2 µL of the anti-Mouse-IgG-Atto647N antibody (1 mg/mL) by pipetting 5-10 times. Then, incubate at room temperature for at least 30 min (or on ice for 2-3 h).
    2. After incubation, add 2.5 µL of blocking buffer (10 mg/mL mouse IgG) and 0.5 µL of 0.5% phenol red to the antibody mixture, and pipette 10x to mix thoroughly, to block any unconjugated antibodies remaining in the mixture.
      NOTE: For each trial, prepare one extra mixture without the anti-Dld antibody and use it as a control.
  4. Prepare 1% low-melting point agarose in the embryo medium. Heat the agarose contained mixture at 70 °C till the mixture turns transparent.
    1. Aliquot the agarose solution in 2 mL microcentrifuge tubes. Keep the aliquots in a heat block at ~40 °C.
  5. Rinse the embryo in the tube containing 1% low-melting point agarose for 3 s.
  6. Place the embryo on an inverted plastic Petri dish lid together with individual drops of agarose (~30-40 µL) to mount each embryo separately on the lid as shown in Figure 1. Lay the embryos flat laterally in the agarose and keep this position until the agarose has solidified at room temperature.
  7. Mount 12 embryos in three rows one by one as above. Cover all the mounted embryos in the agarose with egg medium.

3. Microinjection

  1. Put the embedded embryos under the stereomicroscope and cover the agarose with egg water.
  2. Set the air pressure injector together with micromanipulators, placing them close to the microscopes as shown in Figure 1. Use the steel gas cylinder containing gaseous nitrogen (N2) under high pressure as the air resource.
    1. Open the gas valve only after the embryos have been mounted in the agarose. Then, front load the prepared glass needle with 2 µL of antibody mixture on the micromanipulator, as shown in Figure 1, when using the front fill module of the microinjector.
    2. Tune the input pressure to ~80-90 psi, and the injection pressure to ~20 psi.
  3. Calibrate the injection volume by using a micrometer under the microscope, as described previously15. Set the tune time duration to be from 10 ms to 120 ms, according to the size of needle opening. Deliver each pulse of injection by tapping the paddle. Tune the injection volume of each delivery to ~4-5 nL.
  4. Poke the tip of the microinjection needle through the dorsal roof plate of the hindbrain posterior to the r0/r1 hinge point, and inject about 10 nL (two or three pulses) of antibody mixture without hitting the brain tissue. Observe the flowing of red fluids in the brain ventricle.
    NOTE: The hindbrain ventricle is posterior to the midbrain hindbrain boundary. The injected phenol red-containing antibody mixture fills up the brain ventricle from the hindbrain to the forebrain immediately by diffusing with cerebrospinal fluid.
  5. After injection, remove the tip of the needle from the embryo swiftly by rotating the knob of the micromanipulator. For a successful injection, the red dye of the injected mixture remains in the brain ventricle stably without leaking into the surrounded agarose.
  6. Move the mounting plate under the microscope to locate another mounted embryo at a suitable position for repeats.
    1. After injecting six to eight embryos, peel the agarose with a microsurgical knife to release the embryos from the embedded agarose. Transfer the microinjected embryos to a fresh dish with 30 mL of embryo medium, and place them at room temperature for the next steps.

4. Mounting and time-lapse live imaging

  1. After 30 min, transfer the selected embryos to 10 mL of embryo medium. Add 420 µL of tricaine stock (4 mg/mL) to 10 mL of embryo medium to anesthetize the embryos.
  2. To mount the embryos, prepare 0.8% low melting point agarose containing the same concentration of tricaine in the tube. Keep the aliquots in a heat block at ~40 °C.
  3. Use a glass pipette to immerse the injected embryos in the warm agarose for 3 s. Then, immediately remove the embryos from the agarose with the same glass pipette and place the embryos on the center of 35 mm glass bottom culture dishes with a drop of agarose from the tube. Place only one embryo per drop on the glass.
  4. Orientate the embryos gently with a fiber probe or loading tip to keep the dorsal side of the embryonic brain as close to the glass bottom as possible. Tune the embryo position gently to extend the embryo without curling as the agarose solidifies gradually.
  5. Afterward, check the embryo position by flipping the glass bottom dish over. Ensure that the whole dorsal forebrain with the correctly mounted embryos can be seen under the microscope.
  6. Add 2-3 mL of 28.5 °C preheated embryonic medium containing tricaine to cover the embryo. Place the dish properly on the temperature-controlled stage of the confocal microscope, as shown in Figure 1. Adjust the temperature of the imaging chamber to be at 28.5 °C. The embryo is now ready for imaging.
  7. Perform time-lapse live imaging with a fixed time interval using a 40x water immersion objective.
    1. Use the imaging and microscope control software (µMANAGER: https://micro-manager.org/)16.
    2. Select the imaging channels of 564 nm and 647 nm for imaging the membrane fluorescence of MyR-Tdtomato transgenic zebrafish and endosomal anti-Dld-Atto647N in the cell (Figure 1).
    3. Set the laser power at 30% for both channels. Use an exposure time per z-plane of 200 ms for each channel.
    4. For each mounted zebrafish embryo, use a scanning z-step of 1 µm for 20 z-planes in total, and a scanning cycle of 100 timeframes.
    5. Set the time interval between each scanning cycle at 20 s and the scanning mode as channel, slice.

Results

In Figure 2A, the embryos injected with Atto647N, without binding with the primary antibody, showed background fluorescence in the brain ventricle. Very few engulfed fluorescent particles can be observed in the cells. The anti-Dld-Atto647N injected zebrafish embryos showed large amounts of internalized fluorescent particles in most cells of the developing forebrain (Figure 2A, right panel). After zooming in to focus on mitotic RGPs, as shown in

Discussion

We have developed an antibody uptake assay for labeling and imaging endosomal Notch/Delta trafficking in zebrafish radial glia progenitors with high efficiency. Compared to previous methods used for tracking labeled anti-DeltaD antibody in Drosophila SOP cells7,8, our method used microinjection instead of incubation of samples in the conjugated antibody. Fluorescently conjugated anti-Dld antibodies were microinjected into the hindbrain ventricle; this technique d...

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

The project was supported by NIH R01NS120218, the UCSF Mary Anne Koda-Kimble Seed Award for Innovation, and Chan Zuckerberg Biohub.

Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
35mm glass bottom culture dish MatTek corporationP35GC-1.5-10-C
air pressure injector NarishigeIM300
Anti-Mouse-IgG-Atto647N Sigma-Aldrich50185
CaCl2.2H2Sigma-AldrichC3306
Capillaries, 1.2 mm OD, 0.9 mm ID, with filamentWorld Precision Instruments1B120F-6
CSU-W1 Spinning Disk/High Speed WidefieldNikinN/ANikon Ti inverted fluorescence microscope with CSU-W1 large field of view confocal. 
Dumont Medical Tweezers Style 5Thomas Scientific72877-D
Flaming-Brown P897 pullerSutter InstrumentsN/Ahttps://www.sutter.com/manuals/P-97-INT_OpMan.pdf
KClMillipore529552
MgSO4.7H2OSigma-AldrichM2773
micromanipulatorsWorld Precision InstrumentsWPI M3301R
Mouse anti-Dld AbcamAB_1268496
Mouse IgG blocking buffer from ZenonThermofisher ScientificZ25008
NaClSigma-AldrichS3014
Phenol redSigma-AldrichP0290
Stemi 2000  Zeiss N/A
TricaineSigma-AldrichE10521
UltraPureTM low melting point agarose Invitrogen16520050

References

  1. Baonza, A., Garcia-Bellido, A. Notch signaling directly controls cell proliferation in the Drosophila wing disc. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 97 (6), 2609-2614 (2000).
  2. Chitnis, A. . Developmental Dynamics. 235 (4), 886-894 (2006).
  3. Daeden, A., Gonzalez-Gaitan, M. Endosomal trafficking during mitosis and notch-dependent asymmetric division. Progress in Molecular and Subcellular Biology. 57, 301-329 (2018).
  4. Le Borgne, R., Schweisguth, F. Notch signaling: endocytosis makes delta signal better. Current Biology. 13 (7), 273-275 (2003).
  5. Chapman, G., et al. Notch1 endocytosis is induced by ligand and is required for signal transduction. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. 1863 (1), 166-177 (2016).
  6. Schroeter, E. H., Kisslinger, J. A., Kopan, R. Notch-1 signalling requires ligand-induced proteolytic release of intracellular domain. Nature. 393 (6683), 382-386 (1998).
  7. Coumailleau, F., Fürthauer, M., Knoblich, J. A., González-Gaitán, M. Directional Delta and Notch trafficking in Sara endosomes during asymmetric cell division. Nature. 458 (7241), 1051-1055 (2009).
  8. Derivery, E., et al. Polarized endosome dynamics by spindle asymmetry during asymmetric cell division. Nature. 528 (7581), 280-285 (2015).
  9. Matsuda, M., Chitnis, A. B. Interaction with Notch determines endocytosis of specific Delta ligands in zebrafish neural tissue. Development. 136 (2), 197-206 (2009).
  10. Kressmann, S., Campos, C., Castanon, I., Fürthauer, M., González-Gaitán, M. Directional Notch trafficking in Sara endosomes during asymmetric cell division in the spinal cord. Nature Cell Biology. 17 (3), 333-339 (2015).
  11. Dong, Z., Yang, N., Yeo, S. -. Y., Chitnis, A., Guo, S. Intralineage directional Notch signaling regulates self-renewal and differentiation of asymmetrically dividing radial glia. Neuron. 74 (1), 65-78 (2012).
  12. Zhao, X., et al. Polarized endosome dynamics engage cytoplasmic Par-3 that recruits dynein during asymmetric cell division. Science Advances. 7 (24), (2021).
  13. Zhao, X., Garcia, J., Royer, L. A., Guo, S. Colocalization analysis for cryosectioned and immunostained tissue samples with or without label retention expansion microscopy (LR-ExM) by JACoP. Bio-Protocol. 12 (5), 4336 (2022).
  14. Gutzman, J. H., Sive, H. Zebrafish brain ventricle injection. Journal of Visualized Experiments. (26), e1218 (2009).
  15. Sive, H. L., Grainger, R. M., Harland, R. M. Calibration of the injection volume for microinjection of Xenopus oocytes and embryos. Cold Spring Harbor Protocols. 2010 (12), (2010).
  16. Edelstein, A., Amodaj, N., Hoover, K., Vale, R., Stuurman, N. Computer control of microscopes using µManager. Current Protocols in Molecular Biology. , (2010).
  17. Lukinavičius, G., et al. Fluorogenic probes for multicolor imaging in living cells. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 138 (30), 9365-9368 (2016).

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Antibody Uptake AssayNotch SignalingDelta D LigandEndocytosisRadial Glia ProgenitorsZebrafish ForebrainEmbryonic MediumFluorescent MicroscopyDechorionationMicroinjectionAnti Dld AntibodyGenetic PerturbationsHuman Pluripotent Stem CellsBrain Organoids

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