The article describes a quick protocol for labeling blood vessels in a teleost fish by cardiac perfusion of DiI diluted in fixative, using medaka (Oryzias latipes) as a model and focusing on brain and pituitary tissue.
Blood vessels innervate all tissues in vertebrates, enabling their survival by providing the necessary nutrients, oxygen, and hormonal signals. It is one of the first organs to start functioning during development. Mechanisms of blood vessel formation have become a subject of high scientific and clinical interest. In adults however, it is difficult to visualize the vasculature in most living animals due to their localization deep within other tissues. Nevertheless, visualization of blood vessels remains important for several studies such as endocrinology and neurobiology. While several transgenic lines have been developed in zebrafish, with blood vessels directly visualized through expression of fluorescent proteins, no such tools exist for other teleost species. Using medaka (Oryzias latipes) as a model, the current protocol presents a quick and direct technique to label blood vessels in brain and pituitary by perfusing through the heart with fixative containing DiI. This protocol allows improvement of our understanding on how brain and pituitary cells interact with blood vasculature in whole tissue or thick tissue slices.
Blood vessels play an essential part of the vertebrate body as they provide the necessary nutrients, oxygen and hormonal signals to all organs. Also, since the discovery of their involvement in cancer development1, they have received much attention in clinical research. Although a number of publications have investigated the mechanisms allowing blood vessel growth and morphogenesis, and a large number of genes important for their formation have been identified2, a lot remains to be understood regarding the interaction between cells or tissues and the circulating blood.
Visualization of blood vasculature in the brain and pituitary is important. Neurons in the brain require a high supply of oxygen and glucose3, and the pituitary contains up to eight important hormone-producing cell types that use the blood flow to receive signal from the brain and send their respective hormones to different peripheral organs4,5. While in mammals, the portal system at the base of the hypothalamus named the median eminence, links the brain and the pituitary6, such a clear blood bridge has not been described in teleost fish. Indeed, in teleosts, preoptico-hypothalamic neurons directly project their axons into the pars nervosa of the pituitary7 and mostly innervate the different endocrine cell types directly8,9. However, some of these neurons have their nerve endings located in the extravascular space, in close vicinity to blood capillaries10. Therefore, the difference between teleost fish and mammals is not so clear, and the relationship between the blood vasculature and the brain and pituitary cells requires greater investigation in teleost fish.
Zebrafish has, in many aspects, an anatomically and functionally comparable vascular system to other vertebrate species11. It has become a powerful vertebrate model for cardiovascular research mostly thanks to the development of several transgenic lines where components of the vascular system are labeled with fluorescent reporter proteins12. However, exact circulatory system anatomy may vary between species, or even between two individuals belonging to the same species. Therefore, visualization of blood vessels may be of high interest also in other teleost species for which transgenesis tools do not exist.
Several techniques have been described to label blood vessels in both mammals and teleosts. These include in situ hybridization for vasculature-specific genes, alkaline phosphatase staining, microangiography, and dye injections (for a review see13). Fluorescent lipophilic cationic indocarbocyanine dye (DiI) was first used to study membrane lipids lateral mobility as it is retained in the lipid bilayers and can migrate through it14,15,16. Indeed, a molecule of DiI is composed of two hydrocarbon chains and chromophores. While the hydrocarbon chains integrate in the lipid bilayer cell membrane of the cells in contact with it, the chromophores remain on its surface17. Once in the membrane, DiI molecules diffuse laterally within the lipid bilayer which helps to stain membrane structures that are not in direct contact with the DiI solution. Injecting a DiI solution through cardiac perfusion, will therefore label all endothelial cells in contact with the compound allowing direct labelling of the blood vessels. Today DiI is also used for other staining purposes, such as single molecule imaging, fate mapping, and neuronal tracing. Interestingly, several fluorophores exist (with different wavelengths of emission) allowing the combination with other fluorescent labels, and the incorporation as well as the lateral diffusion of DiI can occur in both live and fixed tissues18,19.
Formaldehyde, discovered by Ferdinand Blum in 1893, has been used widely to the present day as the preferred chemical for tissue fixation20,21. It shows broad specificity for most cellular targets and preserves the cellular structure22,23. It also preserves the fluorescent properties of most fluorophores, and thus can be used to fixate transgenic animals for which targeted cells express fluorescent reporter proteins.
In this manuscript, a previous protocol developed to label blood vessels in small experimental mammalian models24 has been adapted to the use in fish. The entire procedure takes only a couple of hours to perform. It demonstrates how to perfuse a fixative solution of formaldehyde containing DiI in the fish heart in order to directly label all blood vessels in the brain and the pituitary of the model fish medaka. Medaka is a small freshwater fish native to Asia, primarily found in Japan. It is a research model organism with a suite of molecular and genetic tools available25. Therefore, identification of blood vessels in this species as well as in others will allow to improve our understanding on how the brain and pituitary cells interact with blood vasculature in whole tissue or thick tissue slices.
All animal handling was performed according to the recommendations for the care and welfare of research animals at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, and under the supervision of authorized investigators.
1. Preparation of Instruments and Solutions
2. Dissection and Perfusion
NOTE: PFA is a toxic volatile compound, therefore the dissection and perfusion should be performed in a hood or in a ventilated room, and the user must be wearing a gas mask.
This protocol demonstrates a step by step procedure to label blood vessels in the medaka brain and pituitary, and at the same time fix the tissue. After labelling by cardiac injection of a fixative solution containing DiI into the heart, blood vessels can be observed on slices using a fluorescent stereomicroscope (Figure 4) or on whole tissue using a confocal microscope (Figure 5). Either on the thick tissue slice or on the whole tissue, the architecture of the blood vasculature can be observed in three dimensions. Tissue slices can be labeled for specific targeted proteins using standard immunofluorescence protocols after the end of the fixation, and on transgenic lines where cells of interest express fluorescent reporter proteins (Figure 6). This allows investigations on interactions between blood vessels and other specific cell types. Here for example, the use of a transgenic line of medaka where green fluorescent protein (GFP)-producing cells revealed the location of pituitary Lh cells28. One can observe that these cells send extensions towards the blood vessels. Some blood vessels may not be labeled properly if perfusion is sub-optimal. This can be the case, for example, if the solution is injected in the heart ventricle instead of the bulbus arteriosus, or if using too low pressure and/or for too short a period on the syringe piston (Figure 7). Finally, by imaging the same tissue with the same imaging parameters, the intensity of the labeling was shown to decrease after four days, with the signal more spread out (Figure 8).
Figure 1: Images of the holding plate for perfusion of the fish (A) and the injection setup (B). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Schema of the medaka fish heart and perfusion system shown with the idel location of the glass needle in the heart for successful perfusion. Arrow head show where to perforate the heart to allow the blood to leave circulation. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Image of the ventral side of the fish opened, with the heart exposed for perfusion. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Image of the blood vasculature in a slice of brain and pituitary tissue from medaka. An adult medaka was perfused with a fixative solution containing DiI. Brain and pituitary were dissected and fixed overnight. Tissues were mounted in 3% agarose and sectioned with a vibratome before imaging with a fluorescence microscope. All blood vessels labeled with DiI are seen through the whole section showing the vasculature in the brain and the pituitary. OT = optic tectum; Tel = telencephalon; Hyp = hypothalamus; Pit = pituitary; Cb = cerebellum; Hind = hindbrain. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: 3D rendering of a confocal z-stack from the blood vasculature in medaka pituitary. An adult medaka was perfused with a fixative solution containing DiI. Brain-pituitary were dissected and fixed overnight. The pituitary was dissected from the brain and mounted between a slide and coverslip with spacers ib between, before imaging with a confocal microscope. Z-stack was recorded, and a 3D rendering was made using Fiji software and the 3D viewer plugin29. The entire pituitary blood vasculature could be observed in 3D. RPD = rostral pars distalis; PPD = Proximal pars distalis; PI = pars intermedia. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Z projection of confocal z-stack from a tissue slice of transgenic medaka where Lhβ promoter controls expression of green fluorescent reporter protein. An adult tg(lhb:hrGfpII) medaka was perfused with a fixative solution containing DiI. Brain-pituitary were dissected and fixed overnight. Tissues were mounted in 3% agarose and sectioned with a vibratome. Some hormone producing cells, Lh cells in this case, sending extensions (arrow heads) towards the blood vessels can be observed, probably to sense signals from the blood and/or release their hormones into the circulation. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7: Image of blood vasculature in a slice of brain and pituitary tissue from poorly perfused medaka. An adult medaka was poorly perfused with a fixative solution containing DiI by injecting the solution in the ventricle only. Brain-pituitary were dissected and fixed overnight. Tissues were mounted in 3% agarose and sectioned with a vibratome before imaging with a confocal microscope. The blood vessels were poorly labeled with DiI and some of them were not labeled at all. OT = optic tectum; Tel =, telencephalon; Hyp = hypothalamus; Pit = pituitary; Cb = cerebellum; Hind = hindbrain. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 8: Time lapse imaging of labeled blood vasculature in medaka brain-pituitary tissue section. An adult medaka was perfused with a fixative solution containing DiI. Brain-pituitary were dissected and fixed overnight. Tissues were mounted in 3% agarose and sectioned with a vibratome before imaging with a stereomicroscope directly after mounting (A), and 4 days after mounting (B) with the same imaging parameters. Note that the labeling has decreased and spread out with time. OT = optic tectum; Tel = telencephalon; Hyp = hypothalamus; Pit = pituitary; Cb = cerebellum; Hind = hindbrain. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Cardiac perfusion with DiI previously has been used to label blood vessels in several model species24, including teleost fish13.
As DiI is directly delivered to the endothelial cell membrane by perfusion in the vasculature, it is possible to increase the signal-to-noise ratio by increasing the DiI concentration in the fixative solution. In addition, the fluorophore provides intense staining when excited with minimal bleaching allowing relatively long-lasting emission18,30. Also, the labeling can remain for several days and be used in combination with other labeling techniques that require mild treatments, such as in immuofluorescence (IF)31.
However, this technique has some limitations. After removal from the fixative solution, labeling and imaging of the tissues should be performed as quickly as possible because the intensity of the labeling will weaken, and the signal will diffuse with time (Figure 8). This process will be even faster when using detergents that increase porosity of the membrane. Also, because PFA is a toxic volatile compound, several precautions should be taken when performing this experiment. To minimize the hazardous aspects of of this protocol, one can perfuse a solution of DiI and PBS before dissecting the tissue of interest and fix it with the PFA solution right after perfusion. However, this can be performed only for small-sized tissues, as the penetration of PFA in larger tissue samples will be less efficient than during perfusion.
The success rate of this protocol is improved by training, so it is expected that researchers will need some time to get acquainted with the different steps of the technique. For instance, the perfusion of the solution in the bulbus arteriosus is a particularly critical step of the protocol and requires some training to achieve a good result. Also keeping the needle in the correct position for long enough during the perfusion is not trivial, and will require training by the manipulator.
Finally, this protocol is optimized for adult medaka but it can be used for other species with some adaptations. Different tissues of interest, or even different life stages of the animal within the same tissue will also require optimizations for the concentration of DiI and the time of perfusion as well as the material used (needle and syringe sizes for example).
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Dr Shinji Kanda for demonstration of cardiac perfusion with fixative solution in medaka, Ms Lourdes Carreon G Tan for help with medaka husbandry, and Mr Anthony Peltier for illustrations. This work was funded by NMBU and by the Research Council of Norway, grant number 248828 (Digital Life Norway program).
16% paraformaldehyde | Electron Microscopy Sciences | RT 15711 | |
5 mL Syringe PP/PE without needle | Sigma | Z116866-100EA | syringes |
BD Precisionglide syringe needles | Sigma | Z118044-100EA | needles 18G (1.20*40) |
borosilicate glass 10cm OD1.2mm | sutter instrument | BF120-94-10 | glass pipette |
DiI (1,1′-Dioctadecyl-3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate) | Invitrogen | D-282 | |
LDPE tube O.D 1.7mm and I.D 1.1mm | Portex | 800/110/340/100 | canula |
Phosphate Buffer Saline (PBS) solution | Sigma | D8537-6X500ML | |
pipette puller | Narishige | PC-10 | |
plastic petri dishes | VWR | 391-0442 | |
Super glue gel | loctite | c4356 | |
tricaine (ms-222) | sigma | E10521-50G |