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Frank, L. E., Caldera-Siu, A. D., Pothos, E. N. Primary Dissociated Midbrain Dopamine Cell Cultures from Rodent Neonates. J. Vis. Exp. (21), e820, doi:10.3791/820 (2008).
The ability to create primary cell cultures of dopamine neurons allows for the study of the presynaptic characteristics of dopamine neurons in isolation from systemic input from elsewhere in the brain. In our lab, we use these neurons to assess dopamine release kinetics using carbon fiber amperometry, as well as expression levels of dopamine related genes and proteins using quantitative PCR and immunocytochemistry. In this video, we show you how we generate these cultures from rodent neonates.
The process involves several steps, including the plating of cortical glial astrocytes, the conditioning of neuronal cell culture media by the glial substrate, the dissection of the midbrain in neonates, the digestion, extraction and plating of dopamine neurons and the addition of neurotrophic factors to ensure cell survival.
The applications suitable for such a preparation include electrophysiology, immunocytochemistry, quantitative PCR, video microscopy (i.e., of real-time vesicular fusion with the plasma membrane), cell viability assays and other toxicological screens.
Note: ** Glial cells must be plated well in advance so that they have time to proliferate and cover the bottom of the dishes. For mice with atypical or experimental genetic background, make sure to match glial and neuronal cultures in terms of genotype.
Note: ** 1-7 days before dissection, prepare fresh neuronal medium and replace the glial medium in the dishes with 2ml.
Note: ** On the day before dissection, the following items need to be left under UV light overnight:
4 dissection plates
2 dissociation vials with a micro-magnetic stir bar
2 vial caps (with 2 small holes poked in the top)
Spread out slide rings (and coat in 70% EtOH) - leave the box open also
AT LEAST 2 full boxes of yellow (10-200μl) pipette tips
1 box of blue (100-1000μl) pipette tips
Day of Culture
Note: * BE SURE NOT TO TOUCH ANYTHING THAT WAS LEFT OUT FOR UV OVERNIGHT!
Maintaining a sterile environment under the hood is very important.
1) Set Up:
Note: ** Set aside all frozen ingredients to make papain solution.
Clean forceps with 70% EtOH. Cover each tip with a sterile yellow pipet tip. Use to place sterile slide rings in their box.
Hot plate:
Place a mini-magnetic/hot plate under the hood with a 1000ml beaker filled to 500-600ml dH2O and a large magnetic stir bar.
Place a Styrofoam disk in the beaker just above water level.
Slide the thermometer in a small hole in the Styrofoam disk. Heat dial needs to be slightly above 2 (for a temp of 34°C) and the stir dial should be ~ 5-6.
PBS:
Prepare sterile PBS and fill 15 sterile 15ml tubes with 4-6 ml (be sure to maintain sterile technique).
Place the tubes and the stock bottle on ice next to the hood.
Carbogen:
Break a 5ml stripette in half and push it through a rubber stopper, so the tip of the stripette is sticking out the wide end of the stopper.
Place the stopper in a 500ml flask with 400-500ml dH2O (broken end of stripette should be IN the dH2O).
Connect a tube on the side opening of the flask.
Cut the tip off a yellow pipette tip and connect this to the end of the tube (with the cut side facing out).
Connect the carbogen tank to the tip of the 5ml stripette.
Prepare papain sol’n:
* Use careful sterile technique.
Mix in a sterile 50ml tube.
Filter papain sol’n into the dissociation vial:
Use a Steriflip filtration unit and transfer to dissociation vial via 25ml stripette (OR place a new 0.2μm syringe filter on the tip of a 20ml plunger syringe, remove the plunger and use a stripette (25mL) to transfer all of the papain sol’n into the syringe.
Filter into the dissociation vial).
Cap the vial, insert a sterile syringe through the hole in the cap and attach a sterile 0.2μm syringe filter to the base of the syringe.
Connect the carbogen to the filter and parafilm this in place. Place the vial in the Styrofoam disc/holder.
*The micro-magnetic stir bar must be moving. *The gas MUST be making it into the vial. *The temperature MUST stabilize at 34°C.
Dissection prep:
Bring the dissection microscope under the hood.
Lay out all dissection instruments on aluminum foil, spray with 70% EtOH, pour off excess and leave under the hood to dry.
Prepare neuronal medium:
Leave 30ml of fresh neuronal medium in the incubator.
Lay out 1 large square of aluminum foil and 12 smaller squares. Leave the decapitation scissors with the aluminum foil. Fill a small Styrofoam box with ice water and leave all outside of the hood.
Prep the anesthesia (0.075ml ketamine and 0.075ml xzylazine).
Get at least 12 pups (P0-P2) for 100 plates. For mice, make sure there is a genotype match for the whole litter. If genotype is unknown, plate cells from each pup on a separate dish, keep accurate records of mouse numbers and match them with cell culture dishes and make sure the genetic background of the glial substrate is uniform across cell cultures.
2) Dissection
Anesthetize the first animal with an intraperitoneal injection. When animal shows sedation and does not respond to tail-flick test; put it in ice for 30 seconds (until hypothermic). Rinse one small aluminum foil square, decapitation scissors, and head with 70% EtOH.
Decapitate, allow head to fall onto aluminum foil square and move under the hood. Gently remove brain into a 15ml tube of ice-cold PBS. Place the tube back on ice while removing the next brain.
Repeat these first steps until there are 3 brains on ice. Pour all 3 brains and PBS onto the first dissection dish under the microscope. Remove appropriate section of the brain (VTA) and use a transfer pipet to put the segments into papain sol’n. Start a timer when the first segments go in.
Repeat previous 3 steps until all brains are being digested in papain. The average time for digestion should be 2 hours. The first segments will have been in for about 1 hour by the time the last ones go in.
Try to split the difference.
*During digestion:
Make sure the temp in the bath is 34°C.
Segments may stick to the stir bar at first, but should spread out as time goes on. If they do not, tap the bottom of the vial.
3) Trituration:
Using a transfer pipette, transfer the brain segments to a sterile 15ml tube (try to avoid excess papain sol’n) and WASH them 3 times with 2ml of warmed glial medium from the incubator. After putting the glial media in the tube, allow segments to settle and then carefully remove as much sol’n as possible without disturbing the segments. Change pipettes to avoid contamination!
**DO NOT KEEP the sol’n that is removed.
Using a fresh transfer pipette begin triturations in 2ml of glial media. Triturate 25 times (avoid letting in air bubbles) and let the tube sit for 3 minutes until undissociated segments settle. Use a transfer pipette to remove and KEEP as much sol’n as possible without disturbing segments at the bottom. Keep the supernatant in a new (sterile) 15m tube.
Repeat the previous step using a 1000μl pipette and 200μl pipette until completely dissociated.
Triturate 10 times with a transfer pipette, or until the cells are completely resuspended in sol’n.
4) Plating Cells
Using a sterile yellow pipette tip covering each tip of the forceps, carefully drop a slide ring as centered to the glass as well as possible inside each dish.
Put 10μl of the cell solution on the hemacytometer and count. (Exclude junk masses).
Multiply the number of cells by 10. This is the number of cells/μl. Divide 1,000,000-1,500,000 (or desired density) by this number. This is the number of μl to add per dish.
Use the pipette tip to slide rings over the center-well of each dish as you add appropriate μl/dish. Plate them gently and switch tips for EVERY dish.
Add 100μl (of diluted) GDNF sol’n inside the slide ring of each dish.
At this time, place the trays in the incubator and bring the neuronal medium in the cold room.
Allow cells to settle overnight.
Next day: remove rings (using new sterile pipette tips covering the forceps tips for EVERY dish)
5) Mitotic Inhibition: THE NEXT DAY
Dilute FDU aliquots of 1000X stock 1:10 by adding 200μl FDU stock to 1.8 ml sterile MEM.
Add 20μl diluted FDU sol’n to the outside ring of each dish. Change pipette tips often. Cover and return to the incubator.
*Disturb the dishes as little as possible for the next 7-10 days. Check for infected dishes and remove any infected dishes at the first signs of infection. Cultures are ready for testing within 3 weeks.
MEDIA/SOLUTIONS
Neuronal Medium
(for 200mL)
**Best if conditioned on glia from flasks overnight before use for washes/trituration
Ingredient
Amount
Notes
BSA 5%
0.5 g
Fraction V
MEM liquid
94.0 ml
Sigma
DMEM liquid
80.0 ml
Sigma
F-12 liquid
20.0 ml
Sigma
Glucose 45% liquid
1.50 ml
Sigma solution
Glutamine 200mM
0.5 ml
Aliquotted Sigma solution
Diporzio Conc.
2.0 ml
Sigma solution
Liquid Catalase
0.1 ml
Kynurenic acid 0.5M
200μl
In 1N NaOH
HCL 5N
50 μl
Combine ingredients (BSA goes last) in a 250ml plastic bottle.
Filter, label, and refrigerate.
Kynurenic Acid (FW = 189.2) 0.5M = 94.6mg/ml Make 8ml stock: 756.8mgKA/8ml 1N NaOH and pipette into STERILE aliquots of 200μl
DiPorzio Media
A) DiPorzio Conc. Stocks:
NEED
Combine
Alliquot
Additive
Solvent
Tube
Amount
ml
ml/tube
Conc.
Amount
# Aliq.
Insulin
20mM HCL (1)
plastic
250mg bottle
10
1
25mg/ml
25mg
10
Transferrin
Hank’s
500mg bottle
5
1
100mg/ml
100mg
5
SOD
Hank’s
70mg bottle
14
1
5mg/ml
5mg
14
Putrescine
Hank’s
50mg
3
0.12
20mg/ml
2.4mg
21
Na2SeO3
Hank’s
0.104mg
10
0.5
10μg/ml
5.2μg
20
T3
10mM NaOH
2mg
10
0.1
0.20mg/ml
0mg
100
Progesterone
100% EtOH
Glass
12.5mg
10
0.05
1.25mg/ml
Use pipet
Cortisol
100% EtOH
Glass
20mg
10
0.02
2.00mg/ ml
Use pipet
20mM HCl = 41.5μl conc. HCl/25ml.
Make 1mg/ml stock and add 104μl to 10ml.
B) DiPorzio Media Stock:
Additive
Amount (ml)
Amount (ml) X2
Final Conc. μg/ml
Final Conc. Molarity
Progesterone
0.05
0.1
0.06
200nM
Cortisol
0.02
0.04
0.04
125nM
Hank’s BSS
6.21
12.42
Insulin
1
2
25
Na2SeO3
0.5
1
0.01
30nM
T3
0.1
0.2
0.02
30nM
SOD
1
2
5
Putrescine
0.12
0.24
2.4
15nM
Transferrin
1
2
100
Use a 15ml polyproylene sterile tube to add the progesterone and cortisol. Use an aspirator pipet and vacuum to speed evaporation of EtOH: (use a 5ml stripette broken in half and place half-way down into the tube being very careful not to aspirate EtOH liquid. Hold pipet securely in place with Kimwipes and then bring the tip down to the 500μl mark located on the side of the tube.
Add the subsequent aliquots in the order they appear on the above chart.
After the addition of insulin, which makes the sol’n cloudy, add 20μl of 1N NaOH to neutralize the pH. Sol’n should go from yellow to pink and immediately clear. ALSO, after the addition of transferrin, immediately add 20μl of 1N NaOH, to neutralize the pH and prevent the formation of precipitates.
Draw up 10ml into a serological pipet and divide into 5 aliquots (one batch).
Store @ -20°C.
May make 2 batches at once.
Dissociation Media
A. Papain (for 1 vial):
**Prepare day of plating right before dissection.
Ingredient
Amount
(Notes) Final Conc.
Cysteine Water
7.8mL
1mM cysteine
Papain
Varies (*190μl for the bottle of 44.0mg/ml)
20 units/ml (400 units total for 20ml worth of sol’n)
H&B conc.
2mL
Carbogen
95% O2 + 5% CO2
HCl 5N
10μl
0.5% Phenol red
20μl
0.001%
Kynurenate 0.5M
10μl
(In 1N NaOH) 0.5mM
Add papain to the cysteine water FIRST.
Add the H&B conc., kynurenate, HCl, and phenol red.
Filter into dissociation vial (as described in the set-up directions) and connect to the carbogen.
B. H&B Concentrate (100ml of 5X):
Ingredients
M.W.
Powder/50ml H2O
Conc. (M)
Combine (ml)
Final Conc. (mM)
NaCl
58.44
11.699 g
4
14.5
116
KCl
74.56
3.728 g
1
2.7
5.4
NaHCO3
84.01
4.2 g
1
13
26
NaH2PO4*H2O
137.99
6.90 g
1
1
2
MgSO4
120.38
6.019 g
1
0.5
1
EDTA (ED2- SS)
292
Sigma 5% (make 5g/100ml stock)
0.134
0.3722
0.5
Glucose
180
Sigma 45%
2.5
5
25
TC H2O
62.93
Combine amounts from stock solutions.
Divide into 4ml aliquots.
Add aliquot to cysteine water after adding papain.
C. Cysteine Water (157.5ml of 1X):
Ingredients
M.W.
Components Powder (mg)
H2O (ml)
Stock Conc.(mM)
Combine (ml)
Final Conc. (mM)
CaCl2
147.2
736
10
500
0.6
1.9mM
Cysteine
121.7
(1.5)
24
20mM (0.02M)
10
1.27mM (0.88)
TC water
146.9
Make and keep a stock sol’n of 0.5M CaCl2 at 4°C
Make a one use sol’n of cysteine and combine with other ingredients
Divide into 10 aliquots of 15.75 ml and store at 4°C
GDNF Preparation
Aliquot prep:
Dissolve sterile, lyophilized pellet of 5μg GDNF with 2.4mL of sterile deionized water. The concentration of this GDNF sol’n = 2.08μg/mL.
Distribute the 2.08μg/mL GDNF sol’n into 76.9μl aliquots in sterile cryovials. This = 160ng per vial.
Store at -20°C.
Addition to cultures:
Thaw 1 aliquot for every 8 dishes.
Dilute aliquot by adding 723.1μl neuronal media/aliquot. This will make a sol’n of 160ng/800μl GDNF.
Add 100μl of this sol’n to the 2mL of medium in each dish for a final concentration of 10ng GDNF per mL.
FDU Preparation
FDU-sol’n 1000X Stock:
Ingredient
Amount
(Notes) Final Conc.
Uridine
247 mg
16.5 mg/ml
5-FDU (5-fluorodeoxyuridine)
100 mg (bottle)
6.7 mg/ml
TC Water
15 ml
Make a little over 15 ml of 16.5 mg/ml uridine.
Add 15 ml uridine sol’n to 100 mg bottle of FDU to make 6.7 mg/ml sol’n FDU.
Divide into 200μl aliquots and freeze in -20°C.
Dilute for Use:
Inhibit the growth of non-neuronal cells. Dilute 1000X stock 1:10 by adding 200μl stock to 1.8 ml MEM.
Add 20μl diluted FDU to the outside ring of each dish. Change pipet tips often. Cover and return to the incubator.
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The methods described here allow for fine resolution of morphological and neurochemical features of central dopamine neurons that are otherwise not available in a systemic or in vivo approach.
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The work was supported by DK065872 (ENP), a Smith Family Foundation Award of Excellence in Biomedical Research (ENP), F31 DA023760 (BMG, ENP) and P30 NS047243 (Tufts Center for Neuroscience Research).
1. Geiger B.M., Behr G.G., Frank L., Caldera-Siu A.D., Beinfeld M.C., Kokkotou E.G., Pothos E.N. Evidence for defective mesolimbic dopamine exocytosis in obesity-prone rats. FASEB Journal, Aug; 22:2740-6,(2008).
2. Pothos, E.N. Regulation of dopamine quantal size in midbrain and hippocampal neurons. Behavioural Brain Research 130, 203-207, (2002).
3. Pothos, E.N., Larsen, K.E., Setlik, W., Gershon, M.D., Krantz, D., Liu, Y.-J., Edwards, R.H. and Sulzer, D. Synaptic vesicle transporter expression regulates vesicle phenotype and quantal size. The Journal of Neuroscience 20, 7297-7306, (2000).
4. Pothos, E.N., Davila, V. and Sulzer, D. Presynaptic recording of quanta from midbrain dopamine neurons and modulation of the quantal size. The Journal of Neuroscience 18, 4106-4118, (1998).
5. Sulzer, D. and Pothos, E.N. Presynaptic mechanisms that regulate quantal size. Reviews in the Neurosciences 11, 159-212, (2000).
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I would like to thank Lauren and Emmanuel for such an excellent piece of science. I was thinking of setting up the method in my lab and the video encouraged me to do so. Sure it helps a lot!!! Hope to see more like this video in the future.
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Thank you very much for this wonderful protocol. I am very excited to try this out. Could you please let me know what kind of plates you used for plating the glia and where did you buy the slide rings from (catalog number perhaps). Thanks a bunch!
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Thank you for the comment and we are happy to help. The dishes were ordered from World Precision Instruments: FlouroDish FD35PDL-100, tissue culture dish with cover glass bottom, dish:35mm glass:23mm.
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We do not have a protocol to separate astrocytes from neurons, all our cell sorting is done through immunocytochemistry on fixed tissue. Best, Emmanuel
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I have never worked with midbrain coltures and I really appreciate your video that will help me for sure. I have a question, when you first plate astrocytes 2 weeks before, you mean astrocytes from midbrain tissue? Or maybe are they from cortex or hyppocampus? Because I know how to prepare cortical astrocytes but I would like to know if it is possible to prepare them also from midbrain. Thanks in advance.
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I have never worked with midbrain coltures and I really appreciate your video that will help me for sure. I have a question, when you first plate astrocytes 2 weeks before, you mean astrocytes from midbrain tissue? Or maybe are they from cortex or hyppocampus? Because I know how to prepare cortical astrocytes but I would like to know if it is possible to prepare them also from midbrain. Thanks in advance.
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Hi again,
Sorry, i had one other thing to ask if I may. We have a lot of experience with hippocampal dissociated cultures and would be interested in seeing whether the midbrain cultures can work with the media we use for these (Neurobasal and variants); in trying this, is there any specific nutritional or medium requirement of DA neurons you've identified that we should be aware of, which isn't likely to be something we are already giving the hippocampal neurons? I see you include things like catalase and kynurenic acid that aren't in our medium......I presume these are to minimise oxidative and excitotoxic stress? Can i ask, do you have an idea of how much these improve the yield by? Many thanks again, Alex
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Sorry, one final one from me - have you ever tried the Banker method with these? I have heard this doesn't work as well as having the cell layers in full contact, is this your experience? Is it very much worse? I am very interested in trying Banker because a neuronal monolayer would work much better with the microscopy set up I want to use! Many thanks, Alex
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Hello, I wonder if I can ask what you coat your culture dishes with before plating astrocytes? I am finding that mouse glia may be quite sensitive to the usual things like poly-D-lysine etc. Many thanks, Alex
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Hi, thanks for the protocol. Can you explain why you use P0-P2 mice? I am looking to study early DA neurons from what would become the VTA and was planning on using embryonic brains, so wondered what the reason was for using neonatal brains here.
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Using embryonic instead of neonatal brains with this procedure would be fine provided that you account for adequate brain development in utero. To be safe and ensure health of the dopamine cell bodies in culture, I would avoid using embryos prior to the third trimester of gestation. We have not used dissociated cultures for precursors to dopamine neurons so I am not really qualified to vouch for the viability of such preparations. Emmanuel
Excellent!
1
ReplyPosted by: mikeNovember 14, 2008, 11:03 AM