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Bu Makalede

  • Özet
  • Özet
  • Protokol
  • Tartışmalar
  • Açıklamalar
  • Teşekkürler
  • Malzemeler
  • Referanslar
  • Yeniden Basımlar ve İzinler

Özet

Here, we present a method for the photoactivated switch of photoconvertible fluorescent proteins (PCFPs) in the living zebrafish embryo and further tracking of photoconverted protein at specific time points during development. This methodology allows monitoring of cell biological events underlying different developmental processes in a live vertebrate organism.

Özet

Embryogenesis is a dynamic process that is best studied by using techniques that allow the documentation of developmental changes in vivo. The use of genetically-encoded fluorescent proteins has proven a valuable strategy for elucidating dynamic morphogenetic processes as they occur in the intact organism. During the past decade, the development of photoactivatable and photoconvertible fluorescent proteins has opened the possibility to investigate the fate of discrete subpopulations of tagged proteins1. Unlike photoactivatable proteins, photoconvertible fluorescent proteins (PCFPs) are readily tracked and imaged in their native emission state prior to photoconversion, making it easier to identify and select regions by optical inspection. PCFPs, such as Kaede2, KikGR3, Dendra4 and EosFP5, can be shifted from green to red upon exposure to UV or blue light due to a His-Tyr-Gly tripeptide sequence which forms a green chromophore that can be photoconverted to a red one by a light-catalyzed β-elimination and subsequent extension of a π-conjugated system3. PCFPs and their monomeric variants are useful tools for tracking cells6-10 and studying protein dynamics11-14, respectively. During recent years, PCFPs have been expressed in different animal model, such as zebrafish6, chicken7,8 and mouse9,10 for cell fate tracking. Here we report a protocol for cell-specific photoconversion of PCFPs in the living zebrafish embryo and further tracking of photoconverted proteins at later developmental stages. This methodology allows studying, in a tissue-specific manner, cell biological events underlying morphogenesis in the zebrafish animal model.

Protokol

1. Obtaining Embryos for the Photoconversion Assay

Upon in-crossing of transgenic zebrafish expressing a PCFP the brightest which are homozygote embryos are chosen, and grown at 28.5 °C until the desired embryonic stage15.

Note 1: This preselection will allow scanning embryos with low laser power thereby preventing phototoxicity and photobleaching.

Note 2: We suggest to use low-intensity light when visualizing embryos and to maintain them in the dark conditions due to high sensitivity of PCFPs, such as Kaede and KikGR, to light exposure including daylight.

2. Embedding

  1. In a glass container with egg-water, dechorionate embryos under stereomicroscope using forceps.
  2. Anesthetize embryos by transferring a dechorionated embryo into 0.16 mg/ml Tricaine (3-amino benzoic acidethylester, Sigma-Aldrich) solution (40μl of 4 mg/ml stock solution in 1 ml of E3 medium 1X).

Note 1: Transfer embryos with a glass pipette or a cut-tip (P1000) to minimize the risk of damaging the embryos.

Note 2: Young dechorionated embryos should not be exposed to air or lifted up to the water/air interface, since the eggs easily rupture when subjected to mechanical stress.

  1. Transfer the anesthetized embryo onto the cover of a culture dish and maintain the embryo within the smallest possible volume of medium.
  2. Transfer the embryo into agarose by pipetting the embryo with 1% low melting temperature agarose (LMA, Lonza) at 30 °C containing 0.16 mg/ml Tricaine, and place it onto the cover-glass of a cover-glass-bottomed culture dish (MatTek Corp. Ashland MA USA). Subsequently, orient the embryo with the help of a smooth plastic tip (e.g. a cut Microloader Pipette Tip, Eppendorf) and, when the LMA has polymerized, cover agarose with 0.16 mg/ml Tricaine solution.

Note 1: Melt 1% LMA at 60 °C and maintain melted agarose at 30 °C.

3. Photoconversion

  1. On an inverted confocal microscope equipped with an 405 nm, 488nm and 561nm laser source, such as the Zeiss LSM 710, visualize the sample by a z-Stack scan covering the entire structure of the specimen to be photoconverted and tracked later on using the 488 nm laser (i.e., 30 mW Ar laser,at 5-7 % intensity, detector set at 493-540 nm) and the 561 nm laser (i.e., 10 mW DPSS 561 laser, at 7-9 % intensity, detector set at 587-651) to scan the tissue/organ for the green and red fluorescence of the photoconvertible proteins, respectively.

Note 1: For the scan before photoconversion, we used a Plan Apochromat 20x/NA 0.8 objective.

Note 2: Always scan for the red fluorescence prior to the experiment to exclude that any accidentally generated red converted PCFP is present.

  1. Select the Time series tool and set for 2 cycles with no interval (one for pre- and one for post photoconvertion).
  2. Select the Regions tool and define one or more regions of interest (ROI) for photoconversion.

Note 1: We recommend to first determine the precision with which the region actually photo-converted by the scanning laser in the ROI matches the ROI selected in the software by measuring the area of photoconverted tissue/cells in all three (xy and z direction) in a fixed specimen where no cell or protein movement is expected. For the settings described within this application, the ROI matched the photoconverted region with great precision but this depends on the objective used and the amount of laser applied for photoconversion. The size of the ROI can be reduced to the size of a single cell depending on the numerical aperture of the objective, the zoom factor and the amount of laser light used for photoconversion.

  1. Select the Bleaching tool and set for start bleaching after scan 1 of 2. We used a 30 mW 405 nm diode laser for photoconversion and carefully optimized for the minimal amount of laser light necessary for complete photoconversion which is mostly achieved by varying the intensity of the laser light, the scan iterations of the ROI and the pixel time (i.e., scan speed).

Note 1: For photoconversion we used a Plan Apochromat 20x/NA 0.8 objective.

Note 2: The power of the laser and the number of iterations must be determined empirically for each experimental setting and should ensure the complete photoconversion from green to red PCFP within the ROI with the minimal necessary amount of laser light to reduce phototoxicity. We recommend to initiate tests using low laser power (e.g. 3 %, corresponding to 0.03 mW in the objective plan) combined with low numbers of iterations (e.g. 20), and to subsequently increase the laser power until complete photoconversion is achieved which in our hands was at 10% laser power (corresponding to 0.1 mW in the objective plan). Under these conditions, all embryos tested survived the treatment plan. Nevertheless, we observed that the yolk membrane is sensitive to laser pulses and can easily be damaged causing death of the embryo. For this reason, embryo lethality after photoconversion may be caused if the position of the target tissue is close to the yolk body.

  1. Scan the sample by a z-Stack using lasers for 488 nm and 561 nm to visualize any remaining green and the photoconverted red fluorescence of the PCFP.

Note 1: For the scan after photoconversion, we used a Plan Apochromat 20x/NA 0.8.

4. Remove Embryo from Agarose

  1. Discard the solution and carefully remove the embryo from the 1% LMA with the help of a needle or a smooth plastic tip.
  2. Maintain the embryo in egg water in the dark at 28.5 °C until the desired developmental stage.

Note 1: It is important that embryos continue their development in egg water, particularly during the first days of development during extension of the embryonic body. Indeed, some embryonic tissues/organs change positions during development and hence require specific orientations during embedding which depends on the particular tissue/organ of interest and the desired developmental stage of analysis.

5. Re-embedding

  1. Proceed like under point 2.) of this protocol.

6. Tracking Photoconverted Tissue at Later Embryonic Stages

  1. Scan of the region of interest (z-Stack) using lasers for 488 nm and 561 nm for green and red fluorescent signals, respectively.

Note 1: For the scan x hours post-photoconversion, we used a Plan Apochromat 20x/NA 0.8.

Note 2: As this protocol does not affect the normal development of the embryo, it is possible to observe the photoconverted embryo at later stages of development (for this, proceed as outlined under points 4 - 6).

7. Representative Results

An example of a photoconversion assay is shown in Figure 1. We tracked endothelial cells during zebrafish development (for a review of the vascular anatomy of the developing zebrafish see16). Accordingly, we used a zebrafish Tg(kdrl:nlsKikGR)hsc7 reporter line expressing KikGR within endothelial nuclei17. Homozygous and brightly expressing embryos were raised at 28.5 °C until 48 hr post fertilization (hpf). Upon dechorionation, embryos were anesthetized and embedded in LMA positioning the anterior-dorsal side of the embryo towards the cover glass for better visualization of head vessels. We use an inverted confocal microscope (Zeiss LSM 710 Meta) equipped with lasers operating at 405 nm, 488 nm and 561 nm, and a Plan Apochromat 20x/NA 0.8 objective for the photoconversion assay and further tracking of the photoconverted protein. As shown in Figure 1A, before photoconversion, KikGR was expressed within endothelial tissue and was only detectable as green fluorescence using a 488 nm Argon laser. Control scans with a 561 nm DPSS 561-10 laser for red fluorescence did not detect any photoconverted KikGR prior to the photoconversion (Figure 1A). Subsequently, the ROI was completely photoconverted using a 405 nm Diode laser (at 10% intensity, 20 iterations) and the head vessels were scanned again using the 488 nm and 561 nm lasers (Figure 1B). As shown in Figure 1B, green KikGR had completely switched to red within the ROI. After the photoconversion assay, the embryo was removed from the agarose and raised at 28.5 °C in egg water. Finally, the embryo was observed again 24 hr post-photoconversion, around 72 hpf, to track the photoconverted endothelial cells at later stages (Figure 1C). Thus, the embryo was embedded in LMA, and the sample was re-scanned using the 488 nm and 561 nm lasers. As shown in Figure 1C, within endothelial tissue arising from the photoconverted ROI, both non- and photoconverted KikGR proteins were observed due to the stability of the red fluorescent photoconverted KikGR and re-synthesis of new green non-photoconverted KikGR.

figure-protocol-9781
Figure 1. Photoconversion of KikGR during zebrafish development. (A,B) A specific region of the endothelial head vasculature was photoconverted at 48 hpf in Tg(kdrl:nlsKikGR)hsc7 transgenic embryos and (C) observed again 24 hr post-photoconversion (around 72 hpf). The fluorescence of KikGR (green), photoconverted KikGR (red) and merged channels are shown. Dotted circles show the ROI before, after, and 24 hr post- photoconversion. Images are dorsal views of the zebrafish embryo, anterior to the bottom. Scale bars: 50 μm.

Protein (Acronym)Ex (nm)Em (nm)EC QYQuaternary StructureBrightness ApplicationRef
Kaede_G508518990.9tetramer259Cell tracking2,6
Kaede_R572580600.3tetramer59
KikGR_G507517540.7tetramer112Cell tracking3,6,8-10
KikGR_R583593350.6tetramer68
mKikGR_G505515490.7monomer101Dynamic tracking Superresolution images13
mKikGR_R580591280.6monomer53
EosFP_G506516720.7tetramer150Cell tracking5,20
EosFP_R571581410.5tetramer67
tdEos_G506516340.7tandem dimer165Superresolution images12,14,21
tdEos_R569581330.6tandem dimer59
mEos2_G506519560.7monomer140Dynamic tracking Superresolution images11,18
mEos2_R573584460.7monomer90
Dendra2_G490507450.5monomer67Dynamic tracking Superresolution images4,11
Dendra2_R553573350.55monomer57

Table I. Properties of photoconvertable fluorescent proteins. Along with the common name and/or acronym for each PCFPs, the peak excitation (Ex) and emission (Em) wavelengths, molar extinction coefficients (EC, 10-3 M-1 cm-1 ), quantum yield (QY), physiologically relevant quaternary structure, relative brightness (as % of EGFP), application, and references are shown in the table. Table adapted from Day and Davidson, 20101.

PCFPZebrafish transgenic linesSource
KaedeTg(elavl3:Kaede)rw0130aOkamoto Lab
Tg(EPV.TP1-Mmu.Hbb:Kaede) 
Tg(ins:Kaede) 
Tg(isl1:Gal4-VP16,14xUAS:Kaede) 
Tg(lhx5:Kaede)b1204/+ZIRC
Tg(myl7:kaede) 
Tg(olig2:Kaede) 
Tg(UAS-E1b:Kaede)s1999tZIRC
Tg(UAS:Kaede)rk8ZIRC
Tg(vsx2:Kaede)nns2Higashijima Lab
KikGRTg(kdrl:nlsKikGR) 
Tg(krt4:NTR-KikGR) 
Tg(myl7:nlsKikGR) 
Tg(sox10:KikGR) 
Tg(UAS:KikGR) 
EosFPTg(sox10:EosFP) 
Tg(sox10:nlsEosFP) 
DendraTg(-8mpx:Dendra2) 
Tg(UAS:Dendra-kras) 

Table II. Zebrafish transgenic lines expressing PCFPs. Data obtained in the Zebrafish Model Organism Database (ZFIN, http://zfin.org/). Availability of lines in the Zebrafish International Resource Center (ZIRC, http://zebrafish.org/zirc/) is indicated.

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Tartışmalar

In recent years, transgenic animal models for the expression of photoconvertible proteins such as Kaede or KikGR have been generated. These animals develop normally, indicating that these proteins have no toxic effects on embryonic development. The first report about a photoconversion assay for tracking cells in animal embryos was performed by Hatta and collaborators by injection of mRNA or DNA encoding Kaede into one-cell zebrafish embryos for ubiquitous expression, or by expression of Kaede and KikGR in neural tissue b...

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Açıklamalar

No conflicts of interest declared.

Teşekkürler

We thank Dr. Ian C. Scott for kindly providing the zebrafish transgenic Tg(kdrl:nlsKikGR)hsc7 line at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada. We thank the Confocal and 2-Photon Microscopy Core Facility (Max-Delbrueck-Center for Molecular Medicine) and Dr. Zoltan Cseresnyes, for excellent technical assistance and overall imaging support. S.A.-S. is supported by a Heisenberg fellowship of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG). This work was supported by DFG grant SE2016/7-1.

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Malzemeler

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Materials:
Necessary equipment for raising fish and collecting eggs (see the Zebrafish Book22 for details).
StereomicroscopeLeicaLecia MZ6 StereomicroscopeEquipped with laser operating at 488 nm
Confocal laser scanning microscopeZeissZeiss LSM 710 NLOequipped with lasers operating at 488 nm, 561 nm, and 405 nm
Heating block
Pair of Dumont #5 forceps
Cover-glass-bottomed culture dishMatTek CorpAshland MA USA
Microloader Pipette TipsEppendorf
Vortex
needles
Reagents:
Egg water medium
60 μg/ml Instant Ocean Sea Salts in ddH2O
E3 medium
5 mM NaCl
0.17 mM KCl
0.33 mM CaCl2
0.33 mM MgSO4
0.00001% (w/v) Methylene Blue
4 mg/ml Tricaine stock solution
400 mg Tricaine (3-amino benzoic acidethylester)Sigma-Aldrich
97.9 ml ddH2O
2.1 ml 1M Tris (pH9)
Adjust at pH 7, aliquot and store -20 °C
1% LMA (Low melting temperature agarose, Lonza)
1g LMA/100 ml E3 medium 1X
Aliquot and store at 4 °C

Referanslar

  1. Day, R. N., Davidson, M. W. The fluorescent protein palette: tools for cellular imaging. Chem. Soc. Rev. 38, 2887-2921 (2009).
  2. Ando, R., Hama, H., Yamamoto-Hino, M., Mizuno, H., Miyawaki, A. An optical marker based on the UV-induced green-to-red photoconversion of a fluorescent protein. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99, 12651-12656 (2002).
  3. Tsutsui, H., Karasawa, S., Shimizu, H., Nukina, N., Miyawaki, A. Semi-rational engineering of a coral fluorescent protein into an efficient highlighter. EMBO Rep. 6, 233-238 (2005).
  4. Gurskaya, N. G., Verkhusha, V. V., Shcheglov, A. S., Staroverov, D. B., Chepurnykh, T. V., Fradkov, A. F., Lukyanov, S., Lukyanov, K. A. Engineering of a monomeric green-to-red photoactivatable fluorescent protein induced by blue light. Nat. Biotechnol. 24, 461-465 (2006).
  5. Wiedenmann, J., Ivanchenko, S., Oswald, F., Schmitt, F., Rocker, C., Salih, A., Spindler, K. D., Nienhaus, G. U. EosFP, a fluorescent marker protein with UV-inducible green-to-red fluorescence conversion. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101, 15905-15910 (2004).
  6. Hatta, K., Tsujii, H., Omura, T. Cell tracking using a photoconvertible fluorescent protein. Nat. Protoc. 1, 960-967 (2006).
  7. Stark, D. A., Kulesa, P. M. An in vivo comparison of photoactivatable fluorescent proteins in an avian embryo model. Dev. Dyn. 236, 1583-1594 (2007).
  8. Kulesa, P. M., Teddy, J. M., Stark, D. A., Smith, S. E., McLennan, R. Neural crest invasion is a spatially-ordered progression into the head with higher cell proliferation at the migratory front as revealed by the photoactivatable protein, KikGR. Dev. Biol. 316, 275-287 (2008).
  9. Nowotschin, S., Hadjantonakis, A. K. Use of KikGR a photoconvertible green-to-red fluorescent protein for cell labeling and lineage analysis in ES cells and mouse embryos. BMC Dev. Biol. 9, 49(2009).
  10. Griswold, S. L., Sajja, K. C., Jang, C. W., Behringer, R. R. Generation and characterization of iUBC-KikGR photoconvertible transgenic mice for live time-lapse imaging during development. Genesis. 49, 591-598 (2011).
  11. Baker, S. M., Buckheit, R. W. 3rd, Falk, M. M. Green-to-red photoconvertible fluorescent proteins: tracking cell and protein dynamics on standard wide-field mercury arc-based microscopes. BMC Cell Biol. 11, 15(2010).
  12. Watanabe, S., Punge, A., Hollopeter, G., Willig, K. I., Hobson, R. J., Davis, M. W., Hell, S. W., Jorgensen, E. M. Protein localization in electron micrographs using fluorescence nanoscopy. Nat. Methods. 8, 80-84 (2011).
  13. Habuchi, S., Tsutsui, H., Kochaniak, A. B., Miyawaki, A., van Oijen, A. M. mKikGR, a monomeric photoswitchable fluorescent protein. PLoS One. 3, e3944(2008).
  14. Fang, Z., Takizawa, N., Wilson, K. A., Smith, T. C., Delprato, A., Davidson, M. W., Lambright, D. G., Luna, E. J. The membrane-associated protein, supervillin, accelerates F-actin-dependent rapid integrin recycling and cell motility. Traffic. 11, 782-799 (2010).
  15. Kimmel, C. B., Ballard, W. W., Kimmel, S. R., Ullmann, B., Schilling, T. F. Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafish. Dev. Dyn. 203, 253-310 (1995).
  16. Isogai, S., Horiguchi, M., Weinstein, B. M. The vascular anatomy of the developing zebrafish: an atlas of embryonic and early larval development. Dev. Biol. 230, 278-301 (2001).
  17. Lazic, S., Scott, I. C. Mef2cb regulates late myocardial cell addition from a second heart field-like population of progenitors in zebrafish. Dev. Biol. 354, 123-133 (2011).
  18. McKinney, S. A., Murphy, C. S., Hazelwood, K. L., Davidson, M. W., Looger, L. L. A bright and photostable photoconvertible fluorescent protein. Nat. Methods. 6, 131-133 (2009).
  19. Godinho, L. Live imaging of zebrafish development. Cold Spring Harb Protoc. 2011, 770-777 (2011).
  20. Curran, K., Lister, J. A., Kunkel, G. R., Prendergast, A., Parichy, D. M., Raible, D. W. Interplay between Foxd3 and Mitf regulates cell fate plasticity in the zebrafish neural crest. Dev. Biol. 344, 107-118 (2010).
  21. Nienhaus, G. U., Nienhaus, K., Holzle, A., Ivanchenko, S., Renzi, F., Oswald, F., Wolff, M., Schmitt, F., Rocker, C., Vallone, B., Weidemann, W., Heilker, R., Nar, H., Wiedenmann, J. Photoconvertible fluorescent protein EosFP: biophysical properties and cell biology applications. Photochem. Photobiol. 82, 351-358 (2006).
  22. Westerfield, M. The zebrafish book. A guide for the laboratory use of zebrafish (Danio rerio). , 4th ed, Univ. of Oregon Press. Eugene. (2000).

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Cell TrackingPhotoconvertible ProteinsZebrafish DevelopmentEmbryogenesisGenetically encoded Fluorescent ProteinsDynamic Morphogenetic ProcessesPhotoactivatable ProteinsPhotoconvertible Fluorescent Proteins PCFPsKaedeKikGRDendraEosFPGreen To Red ShiftUV Or Blue Light ExposureCell Fate Tracking

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