-1::1
Simple Hit Counter
Skip to content

Products

Solutions

×
×
Sign In

EN

EN - EnglishCN - 简体中文DE - DeutschES - EspañolKR - 한국어IT - ItalianoFR - FrançaisPT - Português do BrasilPL - PolskiHE - עִבְרִיתRU - РусскийJA - 日本語TR - TürkçeAR - العربية
Sign In Start Free Trial

RESEARCH

JoVE Journal

Peer reviewed scientific video journal

Behavior
Biochemistry
Bioengineering
Biology
Cancer Research
Chemistry
Developmental Biology
View All
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

Video encyclopedia of advanced research methods

Biological Techniques
Biology
Cancer Research
Immunology
Neuroscience
Microbiology
JoVE Visualize

Visualizing science through experiment videos

EDUCATION

JoVE Core

Video textbooks for undergraduate courses

Analytical Chemistry
Anatomy and Physiology
Biology
Calculus
Cell Biology
Chemistry
Civil Engineering
Electrical Engineering
View All
JoVE Science Education

Visual demonstrations of key scientific experiments

Advanced Biology
Basic Biology
Chemistry
View All
JoVE Lab Manual

Videos of experiments for undergraduate lab courses

Biology
Chemistry

BUSINESS

JoVE Business

Video textbooks for business education

Accounting
Finance
Macroeconomics
Marketing
Microeconomics

OTHERS

JoVE Quiz

Interactive video based quizzes for formative assessments

Authors

Teaching Faculty

Librarians

K12 Schools

Biopharma

Products

RESEARCH

JoVE Journal

Peer reviewed scientific video journal

JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

Video encyclopedia of advanced research methods

JoVE Visualize

Visualizing science through experiment videos

EDUCATION

JoVE Core

Video textbooks for undergraduates

JoVE Science Education

Visual demonstrations of key scientific experiments

JoVE Lab Manual

Videos of experiments for undergraduate lab courses

BUSINESS

JoVE Business

Video textbooks for business education

OTHERS

JoVE Quiz

Interactive video based quizzes for formative assessments

Solutions

Authors
Teaching Faculty
Librarians
K12 Schools
Biopharma

Language

English

EN

English

CN

简体中文

DE

Deutsch

ES

Español

KR

한국어

IT

Italiano

FR

Français

PT

Português do Brasil

PL

Polski

HE

עִבְרִית

RU

Русский

JA

日本語

TR

Türkçe

AR

العربية

    Menu

    JoVE Journal

    Behavior

    Biochemistry

    Bioengineering

    Biology

    Cancer Research

    Chemistry

    Developmental Biology

    Engineering

    Environment

    Genetics

    Immunology and Infection

    Medicine

    Neuroscience

    Menu

    JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

    Biological Techniques

    Biology

    Cancer Research

    Immunology

    Neuroscience

    Microbiology

    Menu

    JoVE Core

    Analytical Chemistry

    Anatomy and Physiology

    Biology

    Calculus

    Cell Biology

    Chemistry

    Civil Engineering

    Electrical Engineering

    Introduction to Psychology

    Mechanical Engineering

    Medical-Surgical Nursing

    View All

    Menu

    JoVE Science Education

    Advanced Biology

    Basic Biology

    Chemistry

    Clinical Skills

    Engineering

    Environmental Sciences

    Physics

    Psychology

    View All

    Menu

    JoVE Lab Manual

    Biology

    Chemistry

    Menu

    JoVE Business

    Accounting

    Finance

    Macroeconomics

    Marketing

    Microeconomics

Start Free Trial
Loading...
Home
JoVE Science Education
Basic Biology
Chick ex ovo Culture
Chick ex ovo Culture
JoVE Science Education
Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick
A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content.  Sign in or start your free trial.
JoVE Science Education Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick
Chick ex ovo Culture

4.14: Chick ex ovo Culture

19,289 Views
06:48 min
April 30, 2023

Overview

One strength of the chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) as a model organism for developmental biology is that the embryo develops outside the female and is easily accessible for experimental manipulation. Many techniques allow scientists to examine chicken embryos inside the eggshell (in ovo), but embryonic access can be limited at later stages of development. Fortunately, chicks can also be cultured ex ovo, or outside of the eggshell. The major advantage to ex ovo culture is greater access to tissues that might otherwise be obstructed by the shell or the orientation of the chick within the egg, especially for embryos in later stages of development.

There are two principle strategies to ex ovo culture: whole yolk culture and explant culture. During whole yolk culture, the eggshell is cracked and the contents are transferred to a simple housing vessel. However, in explant culture methods, the embryo is excised from the yolk and mounted in the housing vessel to maintain membrane tension, which is important for normal development.

Basic protocols for whole-yolk and explant techniques will be provided in this video, along with a discussion of the pros and cons of culturing chicks outside of the shell. Finally, experimental applications of ex ovo culture will be discussed, demonstrating how this approach is used to improve access to the embryo for microscopy and genetic manipulation of late stage embryos.

Procedure

The chick is a versatile model organism for the study of developmental pathways because most of its development takes place outside of the mother. Nonetheless, the eggshell prevents access to the embryo for some forms of experimentation. Fortunately, chicks can be incubated outside of the shell, or “ex ovo,” using some commonly available lab supplies. In this video, you will learn about the principles of ex ovo culture, step-by-step procedures for two different culture methods, and applications of the technique in developmental studies.

Before talking about how to raise chicks ex ovo, let’s go over some principles of the technique. Within the egg, the chick develops in close association with the vitelline membrane surrounding the yolk. The remaining volume is filled with albumin, or egg white, which protects the embryo and serves as a source of protein.

Culture outside of the shell can be performed via whole yolk culture, using all of the egg contents in a simple container. Alternatively, embryonic tissues can be excised and grown in ex ovo explant culture. Both of these techniques have distinct advantages over the use of windowed eggs.

First, windowing later stage chicken embryos is complicated due the presence of many crucial blood vessels, which develop within the membranes that surround the chick. This makes the ex ovo method preferable for working with chicks at later stages.

Second, because they can fit within imaging rigs, ex ovo culture setups are more amenable to high-resolution imaging.

Furthermore, removing embryos from the shell exposes a greater number of tissues for experimental manipulations like microsurgery and microinjection.

Since the chick relies upon the eggshell for protection and essential minerals, embryo survival without this structure requires some extra care. For instance, housing must be designed to maintain a sterile, humid environment, and nutrients must be provided in the form of albumin or culture medium. For long-term culture, crushed shell is also required as a calcium source. Furthermore, since tension on the membranes supporting the embryo is important for normal development, successful ex ovo culture additionally depends upon housing that maintains normal membrane morphology.

Now that you know the basics, it’s time to chicken out! To prepare eggs for whole yolk ex ovo culture, begin by incubating them at 37.5 °C until just before the desired stage.

While you’re waiting, prepare the housing. Petri dishes, weigh boats, and hammocks are commonly used to hold the egg contents. First, sterilize all components by treatment with UV light or ethanol.

Additionally, prepare an outer chamber filled with sterile water to maintain humidity during incubation.

When the eggs are ready, set them in a horizontal position for a few minutes so the embryo rises to the top. Then crack the bottom of the shell and carefully transfer the egg contents into the housing. Finally, cover the housing vessel to maintain humidity, and place the setup into an incubator until the desired age is reached for downstream processing.

An alternative ex ovo strategy, explant culture, requires a few additional steps after removing the embryo from the shell.

In this technique, the vitelline membrane is gently separated from the yolk, carrying the developing embryo with it.

Then, the membrane is mounted in order to maintain tension, which can be done by pulling the tissue tight around a glass ring or by simple adherence to filter paper.

After mounting, culture medium is added to cover the tissue, and the embryo is placed in a humidified chamber.

The explanted embryos can now be returned to an incubator for up to 24 hours of further development.

After learning the principles and methods of ex ovo culture, we’re ready for some fowl play.

ex ovo culture is particularly useful when you need to alter gene expression in older embryos. One approach to this is electroporation, in which an electric current is used to permeabilize cell membranes for the delivery of genetic material. Since the ex ovo cultured embryos are also highly accessible for imaging, the uptake of genetic material can easily be validated through fluorescent imaging of whole embryos.

Real-time imaging of cell dynamics is also possible using ex ovo culture. Human cancer cells can form tumors by co-opting blood vessels of the chick chorioallantoic membrane, or CAM. After tumor formation, fluorescent particles can be injected directly into to the bloodstream and tracked in real time. Accumulation of particles in tumor tissue can be used as an indicator of angiogenesis, or the formation of new blood vessels.

Although whole embryos can be cultured using explant techniques, some experiments require that embryonic tissues be dissected prior to culture. For example, developing neural tissue can be excised and grown on glass cover slips. After a period of incubation, a specific population of cells known as the neural crest can be observed migrating away from the tissue. Treatment with experimental agents and timelapse imaging can then be used to test factors controlling cell migration.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s guide to chick ex ovo culture. This video covered the principles of ex ovo culture, the basics of whole-yolk and explant methods, and some of the ways these techniques are used in labs today. Thanks for watching!

Transcript

The chick is a versatile model organism for the study of developmental pathways because most of its development takes place outside of the mother. Nonetheless, the eggshell prevents access to the embryo for some forms of experimentation. Fortunately, chicks can be incubated outside of the shell, or ?ex ovo,? using some commonly available lab supplies. In this video, you will learn about the principles of ex ovo culture, step-by-step procedures for two different culture methods, and applications of the technique in developmental studies.

Before talking about how to raise chicks ex ovo, let?s go over some principles of the technique. Within the egg, the chick develops in close association with the vitelline membrane surrounding the yolk. The remaining volume is filled with albumin, or egg white, which protects the embryo and serves as a source of protein.

Culture outside of the shell can be performed via whole yolk culture, using all of the egg contents in a simple container. Alternatively, embryonic tissues can be excised and grown in ex ovo explant culture. Both of these techniques have distinct advantages over the use of windowed eggs.

First, windowing later stage chicken embryos is complicated due the presence of many crucial blood vessels, which develop within the membranes that surround the chick. This makes the ex ovo method preferable for working with chicks at later stages.

Second, because they can fit within imaging rigs, ex ovo culture setups are more amenable to high-resolution imaging.

Furthermore, removing embryos from the shell exposes a greater number of tissues for experimental manipulations like microsurgery and microinjection.

Since the chick relies upon the eggshell for protection and essential minerals, embryo survival without this structure requires some extra care. For instance, housing must be designed to maintain a sterile, humid environment, and nutrients must be provided in the form of albumin or culture medium. For long-term culture, crushed shell is also required as a calcium source. Furthermore, since tension on the membranes supporting the embryo is important for normal development, successful ex ovo culture additionally depends upon housing that maintains normal membrane morphology.

Now that you know the basics, it?s time to chicken out! To prepare eggs for whole yolk ex ovo culture, begin by incubating them at 37.5 ?C until just before the desired stage.

While you?re waiting, prepare the housing. Petri dishes, weigh boats, and hammocks are commonly used to hold the egg contents. First, sterilize all components by treatment with UV light or ethanol.

Additionally, prepare an outer chamber filled with sterile water to maintain humidity during incubation.

When the eggs are ready, set them in a horizontal position for a few minutes so the embryo rises to the top. Then crack the bottom of the shell and carefully transfer the egg contents into the housing. Finally, cover the housing vessel to maintain humidity, and place the setup into an incubator until the desired age is reached for downstream processing.

An alternative ex ovo strategy, explant culture, requires a few additional steps after removing the embryo from the shell.

In this technique, the vitelline membrane is gently separated from the yolk, carrying the developing embryo with it.

Then, the membrane is mounted in order to maintain tension, which can be done by pulling the tissue tight around a glass ring or by simple adherence to filter paper.

After mounting, culture medium is added to cover the tissue, and the embryo is placed in a humidified chamber.

The explanted embryos can now be returned to an incubator for up to 24 hours of further development.

After learning the principles and methods of ex ovo culture, we?re ready for some fowl play.

ex ovo culture is particularly useful when you need to alter gene expression in older embryos. One approach to this is electroporation, in which an electric current is used to permeabilize cell membranes for the delivery of genetic material. Since the ex ovo cultured embryos are also highly accessible for imaging, the uptake of genetic material can easily be validated through fluorescent imaging of whole embryos.

Real-time imaging of cell dynamics is also possible using ex ovo culture. Human cancer cells can form tumors by co-opting blood vessels of the chick chorioallantoic membrane, or CAM. After tumor formation, fluorescent particles can be injected directly into to the bloodstream and tracked in real time. Accumulation of particles in tumor tissue can be used as an indicator of angiogenesis, or the formation of new blood vessels.

Although whole embryos can be cultured using explant techniques, some experiments require that embryonic tissues be dissected prior to culture. For example, developing neural tissue can be excised and grown on glass cover slips. After a period of incubation, a specific population of cells known as the neural crest can be observed migrating away from the tissue. Treatment with experimental agents and timelapse imaging can then be used to test factors controlling cell migration.

You?ve just watched JoVE?s guide to chick ex ovo culture. This video covered the principles of ex ovo culture, the basics of whole-yolk and explant methods, and some of the ways these techniques are used in labs today. Thanks for watching!

Explore More Videos

ChickEx Ovo CultureDevelopmental PathwaysEggshellIncubationLab SuppliesVitelline MembraneAlbuminEgg WhiteWhole Yolk CultureExplant CultureWindowed EggsBlood VesselsImaging Rigs

Related Videos

An Introduction to the Laboratory Mouse: <i>Mus musculus</i>

09:12

An Introduction to the Laboratory Mouse: <i>Mus musculus</i>

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

101.2K Views

An Introduction to the Chick: <i>Gallus gallus domesticus</i>

07:26

An Introduction to the Chick: <i>Gallus gallus domesticus</i>

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

69.3K Views

An Introduction to the Zebrafish: <i>Danio rerio</i>

08:31

An Introduction to the Zebrafish: <i>Danio rerio</i>

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

83.6K Views

Basic Mouse Care and Maintenance

08:29

Basic Mouse Care and Maintenance

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

47.5K Views

Basic Chick Care and Maintenance

06:42

Basic Chick Care and Maintenance

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

14.7K Views

Zebrafish Maintenance and Husbandry

07:58

Zebrafish Maintenance and Husbandry

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

25.8K Views

Development and Reproduction of the Laboratory Mouse

09:04

Development and Reproduction of the Laboratory Mouse

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

62.3K Views

Development of the Chick

07:24

Development of the Chick

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

93.3K Views

Zebrafish Reproduction and Development

08:07

Zebrafish Reproduction and Development

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

105.9K Views

Mouse Genotyping

08:27

Mouse Genotyping

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

91.1K Views

<em>In ovo</em> Electroporation of Chicken Embryos

06:57

<em>In ovo</em> Electroporation of Chicken Embryos

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

25.8K Views

Zebrafish Breeding and Embryo Handling

07:48

Zebrafish Breeding and Embryo Handling

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

59.5K Views

Introducing Experimental Agents into the Mouse

07:40

Introducing Experimental Agents into the Mouse

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

43.0K Views

Zebrafish Microinjection Techniques

08:12

Zebrafish Microinjection Techniques

Biology II: Mouse, Zebrafish, and Chick

56.1K Views

JoVE logo
Contact Us Recommend to Library
Research
  • JoVE Journal
  • JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
  • JoVE Visualize
Business
  • JoVE Business
Education
  • JoVE Core
  • JoVE Science Education
  • JoVE Lab Manual
  • JoVE Quizzes
Solutions
  • Authors
  • Teaching Faculty
  • Librarians
  • K12 Schools
  • Biopharma
About JoVE
  • Overview
  • Leadership
Others
  • JoVE Newsletters
  • JoVE Help Center
  • Blogs
  • JoVE Newsroom
  • Site Maps
Contact Us Recommend to Library
JoVE logo

Copyright © 2026 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved

Privacy Terms of Use Policies
WeChat QR code