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Developmental Biology

A 3-D Tail Explant Culture to Study Vertebrate Segmentation in Zebrafish

Published: June 30, 2021 doi: 10.3791/61981

Summary

Here, we present the protocol for 3-D tissue culture of the zebrafish posterior body axis, enabling live study of vertebrate segmentation. This explant model provides control over axis elongation, alteration of morphogen sources, and subcellular resolution tissue-level live imaging.

Abstract

Vertebrate embryos pattern their major body axis as repetitive somites, the precursors of vertebrae, muscle, and skin. Somites progressively segment from the presomitic mesoderm (PSM) as the tail end of the embryo elongates posteriorly. Somites form with regular periodicity and scale in size. Zebrafish is a popular model organism as it is genetically tractable and has transparent embryos that allow for live imaging. Nevertheless, during somitogenesis, fish embryos are wrapped around a large, rounding yolk. This geometry limits live imaging of PSM tissue in zebrafish embryos, particularly at higher resolutions that require a close objective working distance. Here, we present a flattened 3-D tissue culture method for live imaging of zebrafish tail explants. Tail explants mimic intact embryos by displaying a proportional slowdown of axis elongation and shortening of rostrocaudal somite lengths. We are further able to stall axis elongation speed through explant culture. This, for the first time, enables us to untangle the chemical input of signaling gradients from the mechanistic input of axial elongation. In future studies, this method can be combined with a microfluidic setup to allow time-controlled pharmaceutical perturbations or screening of vertebrate segmentation without any drug penetration concerns.

Introduction

Metameric segmentation of organisms is widely used in nature. Repeated structures are essential for functionality of lateral organs such as vertebrae, muscles, nerves, vessels, limbs, or leaves in a body plan1. As a result of such physiological and geometric constraints of the axial symmetry, most phyla of Bilateria-such as annelids, arthropods, and chordates-exhibit segmentation of their embryonic tissues (e.g., ectoderm, mesoderm) antero-posteriorly.

Vertebrate embryos sequentially segment their paraxial mesoderm along the major body axis into somites with species-specific intervals, counts, and size distributions. Despite such robustness among individual embryos within a species, somite segmentation is versatile in between vertebrate species. Segmentation happens in a vast regime of time intervals (from 25 min in zebrafish to 5 h in humans), sizes (from ~20 µm in tail somites of zebrafish to ~200 µm in trunk somites of mice) and counts (from 32 in zebrafish to ~300 in corn snakes)2. More interestingly, fish embryos can develop in a wide range of temperatures (from ~20.5 °C up to 34 °C for zebrafish) while keeping their somites intact with proper size distributions by compensating for both segmentation intervals and axial elongation speeds. Beyond such interesting features, zebrafish stays as a useful model organism to study segmentation in vertebrates due to the external, synchronous and transparent development of a plenitude of sibling embryos as well as their accessible genetic tools. Adversely from a microscopy perspective, teleost embryos develop on a bulky spherical yolk, stretching and rounding the gastrulating tissue around it (Figure 1A). In this article, we present a flattened 3-D tissue explant culture for zebrafish tails. This explant system circumvents the spherical constraints of yolk mass, allowing access to high resolution live imaging of fish embryos for somite patterning.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Slide Chamber Explant System for Zebrafish Embryos. (A) Zebrafish embryos have advantages for live imaging, such as the transparency of gastrulating embryonic tissue (blue), but the tissue forms around a bulky spherical yolk mass (yellow) which prevents near-objective, high-resolution imaging in intact embryos. Tail explants can be dissected starting with a microsurgical knife (brown) cut from the tissue anterior of somites (red) and continuing at the border with the yolk posteriorly. (B) Dissected tail explants can be placed on a coverslip (light blue) dorsoventrally; keeping neural tissue (light gray) on top and notochord (dark gray) at the bottom. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

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Protocol

This protocol involves use of live vertebrate embryos younger than 1 day post-fertilization. All the animal experiments were performed under the ethical guidelines of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; animal protocols were reviewed and approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (Protocol # 2017-0048).

1. Embryo collection

  1. Set up pairs of zebrafish in crossing tanks the night before the embryo collection day. For precise staging control of embryo development, use barriers between mating pairs.
  2. Raise barriers before preferred spawning time and collect eggs within 15 minutes in a 100 mm Petri dish.
    1. Clean debris from the Petri dish. If more than 50 embryos are collected from a single clutch, split the clutch into multiple Petri dishes accordingly.
  3. Incubate embryos in fish system water at 28 °C until they reach 50% epiboly stage (5 hours post-fertilization). A standardized embryo growth medium such as E3 can also be used instead of the aquarium system water until step 3.2.
    1. Remove unfertilized eggs under a stereoscope and move the embryos to a 23.5 °C incubator overnight (O/N). Embryos should be at 8-10 somites stage the morning following collection day.

2. Tool preparation

  1. Sterilize the microsurgery knife blade, needle tips (used for dissection of the tissue), and glass Pasteur pipette by soaking in 100% ethanol (EtOH) and fire glazing.
  2. Use two layers of transparent tape (~100-120 µm thickness) on 25 mm x 75 mm microscope slides. Cut ~18 mm x 18 mm square wells in the center of each slide's tape covering with a scalpel.
    1. Wipe the prepared slide chambers with 70% EtOH. These wells will hold ~40 µL of medium.

3. Sample preparation

  1. Dechorionate embryos using the tip of two needle syringes under a stereoscope. Transfer embryos into a separate Petri dish with fish system water to rinse.
  2. Using a fire-glazed sterile glass Pasteur pipette, transfer embryos in a 6 cm Petri dish containing dissection medium (Leibovitz-15 cell culture medium with L-Glutamine without Phenol Red, 0.8 mM CaCl2 and 1× antibiotic-antimycotic solution).
    NOTE: Continue to use a sterilized glass pipette for all transfers following this step.
    1. Use a glass Petri dish for explanting procedure to avoid polystyrene chips during dissection.
  3. Put 50 µL of tissue growth medium (dissection medium, and 10% FBS) in the slide chamber.
  4. Stabilize an embryo for dissection under the stereoscope with a needle tip at the yolk-tissue intersection near the hindbrain.
  5. Keeping the embryonic tissue stable with a needle, use the microsurgical knife with the blade held at 45° to cut the tissue anterior to the hindbrain apart and peel the yolk off the embryonic tissue starting from the anterior and moving towards the tail bud (Figure 1A).
    NOTE: Be careful to not lose the skin tissue while cleaning the yolk. The skin would easily peel off as a flanking single layer elastic tissue around the embryo during the dissection, so it is easy to recognize.
  6. Once the yolk is fully removed from the embryonic body, cut the flanking skin tissue from the tailbud. Keeping the last formed 3-4 somites intact, cut the more anterior tissue out (full-axis explant).
    1. The yolk should come off mainly intact from this procedure. In case of a ruptured yolk, significant granules of yolk can stay attached to the ventral surface of the tissue. If so, use a lash tool to clean off remaining yolk granules gently.
      NOTE: An imbalance of skin tissues on the lateral sides of an explant would not allow the tissue to maintain a straight growth direction. The explant instead will bend towards the side of more stretched skin. This imbalance can be corrected under the stereoscope by rupturing the skin layer with the aid of microsurgical knife.
    2. For skinless explants, press on a tip of the skin layer with needle and peel the tissue explant off with the microsurgical knife. These explants will not elongate their body axis in culture.
    3. In addition to the full axis explants, alternative explants can be made at this step. For instance, dissect out already segmented somites using the microsurgical knife (full-PSM explants) or dissect the PSM into its half anteroposterior (half-PSM explants). Please see section 5.1 for an application of such alternative explants.
  7. Immediately transfer the dissected explant to a 22 mm x 22 mm coverslip on which the imaging will be performed.
    1. Arrange the explant flat on the dorsoventral axis, ventral side touching the coverslip (Figure 1B). Gently remove the excess media around the tissue explant using a 20 µL filtered tip pipette.
      NOTE: Delayed transfer of dissected explants to the coverslip results in deformations of the tissue, as it is relieved from the geometric constraints of the yolk.
  8. Swiftly and carefully flip the coverslip with the explant over the growth medium filled slide chamber.
    1. To prevent bubble formation, place a side of the square coverslip on the tape chamber and release the other side gently. Take care to not move/deform the explant in this step.
    2. Gently remove excess media bleeding out of the chamber by pressing the slide chamber on a laboratory tissue. The coverslip will sit stably on the slide chamber for live imaging, due to the surface tension of the liquid medium without any sealing.
    3. For long term culturing (>6 hours), use a bigger chamber. 22 mm x 50 mm rectangular coverslips together with two parallel lanes of tape layers on slides can be utilized in such cases. A ~1 mm wide gap can be left in between two tape lanes to facilitate air access into the growth medium.
  9. Repeat steps 3.3-3.8 to prepare more explants. Prepared explants will elongate their A-P body axis with an average of ~30 µm/h speed and segment their somites with ~40 min intervals at 25 °C (Figure 2A, Video 1).
    1. For non-elongating explants, apply gentle pressure to the sides of slide holding the sample in step 3.8.2 while sucking the excess media out on a laboratory tissue. Alternatively, explants can be cultured in single tape layer slide chambers. Also, chemically activating the slide chamber surface with Type I Collagen will result in non-elongating explants (Figure 2B, Video 2).
      1. Perform coating of the chamber with Type I Collagen in advance by fully covering the slide chambers with 15-20 mL of prediluted collagen solution at room temperature for 1 h. Use a laminar flow hood for this protocol to maintain sterility. Carefully rinse chambers with dissection medium at the end.
    2. For embryos older than 15 somite stage, mount the tail explant tissue laterally instead of a flat (dorsoventral) mount (Video 3). To prevent muscular twitching, include 0.004% tricaine solution in the culture media as an anesthetic agent3.

4. Live image acquisition

  1. Image samples either on a dissection scope for widefield transmitted light imaging of somite segmentation sizes and periods, or with structured illumination/confocal/light sheet microscopy using transgenic reporter fish lines.
  2. Equilibrate the temperature of tissue explants with the imaging room temperature for at least 15 min.
    1. For more precise temperature control, use a commercial temperature control system mounted on an inverted microscope.
  3. Set the image acquisition frame intervals to 2 - 10 min depending on the biological process of interest.
    NOTE: Zebrafish somite segmentation is a fast process, ranging between 20 - 55 min for viable temperatures of 30 °C to 21.5 °C in whole embryos. Explants will elongate and segment ~30% slower than the whole embryos.
    1. Pay attention to leave enough delay between sets of channel acquisitions to avoid possible phototoxicity to live tissue. Do not expose the tissue to the excitation beam for more than half of the imaging duration and lower the beam intensity as much as possible.
      NOTE: Accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is generally the major cause of phototoxicity in live samples4. Ascorbic acid as a ROS scavenger can be supplemented to growth medium at 4 mM concentration to buffer ROS activity and alleviate phototoxicity. Adverse effects of phototoxicity might be hard to notice during live imaging. Tail explants are advantageous in this aspect since some visual markers of phototoxicity such as mitotic arrest, impeded tissue development (i.e., formation of somites, tail elongation), and disintegrating tissue are easier to notice. Please refer to the provided reference4 for a detailed discussion.
  4. Use single cell-stage RNA injected embryos to acquire 4-D images intended to be segmented and analyzed in cellular resolution level.
    1. Use 300 pg of RNA from in vitro transcribed membranes and nuclear fluorescent reporter marker plasmids such as pCS-membrane-ceruleanFP (Addgene plasmid #53749) or pCS-memb-mCherry (Addgene plasmid #53750) in combination with pCS2+ H2B-mTagBFP2 (Addgene plasmid #99267) or pCS2+ H2B-TagRFP-T (Addgene plasmid #99271) in injections. For a sample movie with cell membrane and nuclei markers please see Video 4.
      ​NOTE: Average cell size of PSM tissue is about ~5 µm in diameter, of which nuclei comprises ~3 - 4 µm. A pixel size of ~0.5 µm and a z-sectioning of ~1 µm should be recorded for proper cell segmentation.

5. Immunostaining of tail explants

NOTE: Tissues grown after various dissection scenarios (elongating, non-elongating, tail bud dissected, half PSM etc.) as flat-mounted tail explants5 can be recovered from slide chambers for further immunostaining quantifications of proteins of interest. Here, we present the protocol used for di-phosphorylated extracellular signal regulated kinase (ppERK) staining of explants as FGF signaling gradient readout.

  1. After formation of somites until the desired stage, cautiously shift the coverslip halfway to the corner of the slide chamber without lifting.
  2. With the help of ~100 µL of supplementary dissection medium in a glass Pasteur pipette, recover the explants from the slide and transfer into a 64-well cell culture plate.
    NOTE: Beginning with this step, all solution replacements can be performed under a dissection scope with a separate glass pipette for fixed samples. This will ensure not losing explant tissues in wells or transferring them in between.
  3. After transferring all explants, suck the excessive medium out of the wells one-by-one and put 100 µL of 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS (PFA) into each well.
    CAUTION: PFA is a toxic solution with carcinogenic effects. Proper PPE should be used while handling.
  4. Fix explants in a 64-well plate at room temperature for 1 h on a shaker.
    1. Tissue explants are more sensitive to deformations than whole embryos. Adjust the shaker speed accordingly.
  5. Wash the fixative out with 150 µL of PBS-Tw (0.1% Tween20 in PBS) three times. Collect the first wash in a specific "PFA Waste" container.
  6. Dehydrate explants in 4×5 min steps by replacing ~40 µL of solution each time with 100% methanol (MeOH).
    CAUTION: MeOH is a toxic chemical which is volatile and flammable. Work in a well-ventilated space and use proper PPE for handling.
  7. As the last step of dehydration, remove all solution from wells and replace with 100 µL of MeOH. Incubate at -20 °C for 15 min.
    NOTE: Use a specific "MeOH Waste" container to collect the solutions until step 5.11.
  8. Add 50 µL of MeOH and shake at room temperature for 5 min.
  9. Rehydrate explants in 4×5 min steps by replacing ~40 µL of solution each time with PBS-T (0.1% Triton-X 100 in PBS). Use a specific "MeOH Waste" container to collect the solutions.
  10. As the last step of rehydration, remove all solution from wells and replace with 100 µL of PBS-T.
  11. For tissue permeabilization treat explants with 1.5% Triton-X 100 in PBS for 20 min at room temperature on the shaker.
  12. Wash samples with MAB-D-T (0.1% Triton-X 100 detergent and 1% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) in 150 mM NaCl 100 mM maleic acid buffer pH 7.5) 3×5 min.
    CAUTION: DMSO is flammable and a toxic mutagen. Proper PPE should be used while handling.
  13. Incubate explants in 100 µL/well serum blocking solution (2% fetal bovine serum in MAB-D-T) for 2 hours at room temperature.
  14. Replace all the blocking solution with 50-100 µL/well primary antibody solution (1:1000 dilution of monoclonal mouse antibody against ppERK in serum block). Incubate samples O/N (>16 h) at 4 °C on shaker.
  15. Wash the primary antibody solution with MAB-D-T 5×5 min.
  16. Incubate samples in secondary antibody solution (Alexa Fluor 597 goat anti-mouse IgG2b (1:200) and Hoechst 33342 (1:5000) in MAB-D-T) O/N at 4 °C on a shaker or for 3 h at room temperature.
    NOTE: Beginning at this step, cover the 64-well plate with aluminum foil to avoid light exposure of secondary antibody treated samples.
    CAUTION: Hoechst 33342 is a potential carcinogen. Proper PPE should be used while handling.
  17. Wash the secondary antibody solution with PBS-Tw 3×5 min.
  18. Fix samples with PFA for 15 minutes at room temperature.
  19. Wash the fixative with PBS-Tw and equilibrate samples within 60% glycerol. Mount explants on microscope slides with nail polish and 60% glycerol for imaging. For representative immunostaining results please see Figure 3.

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Representative Results

This protocol enables flat geometric culturing of live zebrafish tail explants. Tissue culture presents three major advantages over whole embryos: 1) control of axis elongation speed, 2) control over various signaling (morphogen) sources by simple dissection, and 3) near-objective, high magnification and high NA live imaging.

Chemically untreated slide chambers allow the tail explant to elongate its major axis (Figure 2A) by the skin ectoderm wrapping around the tissue beneath. When we cultured the explants on the chemically activated slide chambers (with Type I Collagen), the skin ectoderm stretched and adhered to the slide chamber, which halted the axis elongation of the explant. Despite this, the somites continued to segment (Figure 2B, Supplementary Movies S1 and S2). As described in the protocol, axis elongation can also be halted directly by applying physical pressure during the mounting process or mounting explants in a shallower slide chamber. Quantification of axis elongation speed under such physical restraints can be found in our previously published work5.

Figure 2
Figure 2: Control of Axis Elongation in Explants. (A) Explants cultured on a regular slide chamber (left) elongate axially as they keep segmenting new somites. Transmitted light (left, grayscale) and transgenic nuclear marker (right, red) snapshots are shown for 2 h of culture duration. (B) Chemically activating the slide chamber with Type I Collagen before culturing stalls the axial elongation but does not affect somite segmentation speed. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Secondly, explants can be cultured by dissecting out the sources of morphogens to identify instructive information they provide for developmental processes. Here we present three exemplary images showing the effect of dissections on ppERK signaling levels (Figure 3). In the PSM tissue an FGF signaling gradient is established from posterior to anterior (read out by ppERK levels). Only the tail bud tissue actively transcribes fgf86 and forms a source for this gradient with the help of FGF ligand diffusivity5. Tail explants missing the tail bud portion of the tissue after dissection (Figure 3C) results in a shorter ppERK gradient (Figure 3B,3D). Opposingly, a retinoic acid gradient is established from the anterior to the posterior in both the PSM and dorsal neural tissue. Recently formed somites and the anterior end of the PSM express retinoic acid (RA) synthesizing enzymes and act as a source for the RA gradient7. When we dissected out the anterior PSM tissue in the explants (Figure 3E), we still observed a normal extent of the ppERK gradient (Figure 3F) as visualized by immunostaining. A detailed utilization of this strength of explant method can be found in our recent study5.

Thirdly, flat-mounted zebrafish explants are optimal for high resolution live observation of tissue morphogenesis. Here we present a movie (Video 4) taken with a transgenic explant expressing EGFP as a cell membrane marker (false colored with red) and stained with a far-red cell nuclei marker (false colored with cyan). Without further quantification, many processes such as ingression of neuromesodermal progenitors into the tail bud, higher motility of posterior PSM cells as compared to anterior, and epithelialization of somitic boundary cells can directly be observed in the movie.

Figure 3
Figure 3: Immunostaining of Tail Explants. (A) Full PSM explants with intact signaling gradients along the PSM as a control. (B) Regular ppERK gradient is observed in full PSM explants with immunostaining. (C) Tail bud dissected explants are missing a major part of posterior FGF signaling source. (D) A very posteriorly restricted ppERK signal is observed in tail bud dissected explants. (E) Anterior PSM and somitic tissue can be dissected out to remove the sources for possible anterior PSM signaling factors such as RA signaling. (F) Anterior PSM removal does not change the normal extent of ppERK gradient. Tissues were fixed 2 h after explanting for immunostaining protocol. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Movie 1: Axis Elongation and Somite Segmentation in 3D Explants. Widefield transmitted light (top) and nuclear localized GFP (false colored red) epifluorescence (bottom) time lapse images of a regular slide chamber flat-mounted explant. Tail tissue was explanted from embryo at 13 somites stage. Image acquisition is performed on an inverted microscope with 3 min frame intervals. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to download this Movie.

Movie 2: Stalled Axis Elongation on Chemically Activated Slide Chamber. Widefield transmitted light (top) and nuclear localized GFP (false colored red) epifluorescence (bottom) time lapse images of a flat-mounted explant. A 11 somites stage embryo explant was mounted on a slide chamber coated with rat tail collagen solution for 30 min before mounting. Image acquisition is performed on an inverted microscope with 3 min frame intervals. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to download this Movie.

Movie 3: Lateral Mounting of Late-Stage Embryo Explants. Widefield transmitted light (left) and nuclear localized GFP (false colored red) epifluorescence (right) time lapse images of a regular slide chamber lateral-mounted explant. Tail tissue was explanted from embryo at 15 somites stage and tricaine solution was used as anesthetics. Image acquisition is performed on an inverted microscope with 3 min frame intervals. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to download this Movie.

Movie 4: Single Cell Resolution Imaging of Tail Explants. Time-lapse confocal imaging of an explant expressing EGFP as membrane marker (false colored red) and far red stained for nuclei in live (false colored cyan). Average intensity projection from 5 z-layers (10 µm) are shown in the movie over 1 hour. Image acquisition is performed on a GaAsP detector inverted confocal microscope with a 40× apochromatic λS DIC-water immersion 1.15 NA objective lens, with 4 min frame intervals. Scale bar is 100 µm. Please click here to download this Movie.

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Discussion

This article presents a detailed protocol of a tissue culture explant technique we developed and used recently5 for zebrafish embryos. Our technique builds on the previous explant methods in chick8 and zebrafish9,10,11 model organisms. Tail explants prepared with this protocol can survive as long as >12 h in a simple slide chamber, continuing to elongate its major body axis and segmenting somites, until the end of somitogenesis.

Care should be given to keep explant tissue healthy and successfully elongating for long durations. First, the tissue explant should be dissected without damaging the intactness of the posterior tissues. We observed that the skin cells are providing a pouch for neuromesodermal progenitor cells ingressing into the posterior tailbud. If the skin of explants gets peeled off these highly motile cells, leave the tailbud tissue and migrate posteriorly over the coverslip beyond the tissue limits. Second, mediolaterally imbalanced tension of the skin tissue can result in divergent axis elongation, which can bend the axis of the PSM and notochord. A short-slit cut made to the flanking skin cells on both sides of the explant helps to alleviate that concern. Besides the skin-relevant concerns, extra attention should be paid to maintaining the sterility of the growth media and dissection tools for longer duration cultures.

With proper care, the explant culture recapitulates the healthy growth of whole embryos. We observed muscular twitches in the explants beginning from 20 somites stage like in whole embryos12. Although we focused on the PSM tissue for study of somite segmentation, adjacent tissues such as skin ectoderm, neural keel (later neural rod and neural tube), notochord, intermediate and lateral plate mesoderm also remain intact under the described culturing conditions (Figure 1B). This is particularly advantageous for tissues obscured by the yolk that can be imaged in high resolution at ventrally mounted explants, such as notochord, Kupffer's vesicle and other tissues developing at segmentation stages12. It should be emphasized that the explant system does not grow as fast as whole embryos, and do not segment somites at the same pace as whole embryos. This limitation for the explant system can also alter temporal dynamics of other events unobserved here.

Here, we presented representative results that highlight three major advantages of the tail explant system over whole embryo experiments. We recently utilized this method to untangle instructive roles of axis elongation from morphogen gradients for somite segmentation5. Late advances in light sheet microscopy have made whole embryo live imaging possible13 for several model organisms. But most of these methods still lack proper subcellular resolution and are barely accessible to the broader research community. The tail explant model described here makes subcellular resolution tissue-level live imaging accessible with simple inverted or confocal microscopes. Aside from methodological advantages, such live imaging can provide insights on segmentation of the posterior vertebrate body axis. Keeping the protocol as direct and accessible as possible, the explant system can also benefit the broader zebrafish developmental biology field.

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Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose and declare no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

We thank the AECOM Zebrafish Core Facility and Cincinnati Children's Veterinary Services for fish maintenance, the Cincinnati Children's Imaging Core for technical assistance, Didar Saparov for assistance with video production and Hannah Seawall for editing the manuscript. Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R35GM140805 to E.M.Ö. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Materials

Name Company Catalog Number Comments
1 mL Sub-Q Syringe with PrecisionGlide Needle Becton, Dickinson and Co. REF 309597 for dechorionating embryos and manipulations
200 Proof Ethanol, Anhydrous Decon Labs 2701 for immunostaining
Antibiotic Antimycotic Solution (100×) Sigma-Aldrich A5955 for tissue dissection media
Calcium Chloride Anhydrous, Powder Sigma-Aldrich 499609 for tissue dissection media
Dimethylsulfoxide Sigma-Aldrich D5879 for immunostaining
Disposable Scalpel, #10 Stainless Steel Integra-Miltex MIL4-411 for preparing tape slide wells
Ethyl 3-aminobenzoate methanesulfonate salt (Tricaine) Sigma-Aldrich 886-86-2 (optional) for anesthesizing tissues older than 20 somites stage
Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS) ThermoFisher A3160601 additional for tissue culture media
Goat anti-Mouse IgG2b, Alexa Fluor 594 Invitrogen Cat#A-21145; RRID: AB_2535781 secondary antibody for immunostaining
L-15 Medium with L-Glutamine w/o Phenol Red GIBCO 21083-027 for tissue dissection media
Methanol Sigma-Aldrich 179337 for immunostaining
Microsurgical Corneal Knife 2.85 mm Angled Tip Double Bevel Blade Surgical Specialties 72-2863 for tissue dissection
Mouse monoclonal anti-ppERK Sigma-Aldrich Cat#M8159; RRID:AB_477245 for ppERK immunostaining
NucRed Live 647 ReadyProbes Reagent Invitrogen R37106 (optional) for live staining of cell nuclei
Paraformaldehyde Powder, 95% Sigma-Aldrich 158127 for fixation of samples for immunostaining
Rat Tail Collagen Coating Solution Sigma-Aldrich 122-20 (optional) for chemically activating slide chambers
Stage Top Incubator Tokai Hit tokai-hit-stxg (optional) for temperature control during live imaging
Transparent Tape 3/4'' Scotch S-9782 for preparing tape slide wells
Triton X-100 Sigma-Aldrich X100 for immunostaining
Tween 20 Sigma-Aldrich P1379 for immunostaining
Zebrafish: Tg(actb2:2xMCP-NLS-EGFP) Campbell et al., 2015 ZFIN: ZDB-TGCONSTRCT-150624-4 transgenic fish with nuclear localized EGFP
Zebrafish: Tg(Ola.Actb:Hsa.HRAS-EGFP) Cooper et al., 2005 ZFIN: ZDB-TGCONSTRCT-070117-75 transgenic fish with cell membrane localized EGFP

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References

  1. Assheton, R. Growth in length: Embryological Essays. , Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. (1916).
  2. Gomez, C., et al. Control of segment number in vertebrate embryos. Nature. 454 (7202), 335-339 (2008).
  3. Westerfield, M. The Zebrafish Book: a guide for the laboratory use of zebrafish (Danio rerio), 3rd edition. , University of Oregon Press. Oregon. (1995).
  4. Icha, J., Weber, M., Waters, J. C., Norden, C. Phototoxicity in live fluorescence microscopy, and how to avoid it. BioEssays. 39 (1700003), (2017).
  5. Simsek, M. F., Ozbudak, E. M. Spatial fold change of Fgf signaling encodes positional information for segmental determination in zebrafish. Cell Reports. 24 (1), 66-78 (2018).
  6. Dubrulle, J., Pourquié, O. fgf8 mRNA decay establishes a gradient that couples axial elongation to patterning in the vertebrate embryo. Nature. 427 (6973), 419-422 (2004).
  7. Diez del Corral, R., et al. Opposing FGF and Retinoid Pathways Control Ventral Neural Pattern, Neuronal Differentiation, and Segmentation during Body Axis Extension. Neuron. 40 (1), 65-79 (2003).
  8. Stern, H. M., Hauschka, S. D. Neural tube and notochord promote in vitro myogenesis in single somite explants. Developmental Biology. 167 (1), 87-103 (1995).
  9. Langenberg, T., Brand, M., Cooper, M. S. Imaging brain development and organogenesis in zebrafish using immobilized embryonic explants. Developmental Dynamics. 228 (3), 464-474 (2003).
  10. Picker, A., Roellig, D., Pourquié, O., Oates, A. C., Brand, M. Tissue micromanipulation in zebrafish embryos. Methods in molecular biology. 546 (11), 153-172 (2009).
  11. Manning, A. J., Kimelman, D. Tbx16 and Msgn1 are required to establish directional cell migration of zebrafish mesodermal progenitors. Developmental Biology. 406 (2), 172-185 (2015).
  12. Kimmel, C. B., Ballard, W. W., Kimmel, S. R., Ullmann, B., Schilling, T. F. Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafish. Developmental Dynamics. 203 (3), 253-310 (1995).
  13. Kaufmann, A., Mickoleit, M., Weber, M., Huisken, J. Multilayer mounting enables long-term imaging of zebrafish development in a light sheet microscope. Development. 139, 3242-3247 (2012).

Tags

3-D Tail Explant Culture Vertebrate Segmentation Zebrafish Somite Development Transparency Fish System Water Mating Tank Strainer Embryos Petri Dish Dissection Tools Chamber Cuts Cell Culture Media Calcium Chloride Antibiotic Solution Fetal Bovine Serum Tissue Culture Medium De-yoking Coverslip Growth Medium Slide Chamber Microscope Laser Channels
A 3-D Tail Explant Culture to Study Vertebrate Segmentation in Zebrafish
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Cite this Article

Simsek, M. F., Özbudak, E. M. A More

Simsek, M. F., Özbudak, E. M. A 3-D Tail Explant Culture to Study Vertebrate Segmentation in Zebrafish. J. Vis. Exp. (172), e61981, doi:10.3791/61981 (2021).

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