Source: Benedetti, L., et al. Biosensing Motor Neuron Membrane Potential in Live Zebrafish Embryos. J. Vis. Exp. (2017).
This video demonstrates a non-invasive assay to study electrophysiology of motor neurons in zebrafish embryos. Upon measuring tail coiling in the embryos as a result of spontaneous depolarization of the spinal cord motor neurons, a sodium channel blocker is applied to reduce the coiling frequency. Next, the embryos are immobilized in agarose and placed under a fluorescence microscope. The genetically engineered motor neurons express a voltage-sensing biosensor with a donor and an acceptor fluorophore. A decrease in acceptor fluorophore emission indicates a reduction in the spontaneous depolarization of motor neurons due to the sodium channel blocker.
All procedures involving animal models have been reviewed by the local institutional animal care committee and the JoVE veterinary review board.
1. pHuC_Mermaid Plasmid Generation
NOTE: Mermaid is a biosensor developed by pairing the voltage-sensing domain (VSD) of the Ciona intestinalis (now Ciona robusta) voltage sensor containing phosphatase (Ci-VSP) with the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) partner fluorophores Umi-Kinoko Green (mUKG: donor) and a monomeric version of the orange-emitting fluorescent protein Kusabira Orange (mKOk: acceptor). For this biosensor, conformational changes of the VSD domain, induced by membrane depolarization, increase the proximity of the donor and acceptor fluorescent proteins, thus increasing the energy transfer between them (increasing the FRET Ratio). The VSD assures the efficient localization of the biosensor at the plasma membrane. The neuronal expression of the biosensor (in the spinal cord, the signal is detectable in both interneurons and motor neurons) is achieved by cloning the Mermaid open reading frame (ORF) under the zebrafish pan-neural promoter HuC.
2. Embryo Microinjection
3. Spontaneous Tail Coiling Analysis
NOTE: Evaluate the spontaneous tail coiling behavior in 20-24 hpf embryos with or without the drug riluzole.
4. Imaging Setup for Mermaid Biosensor Visualization in Living Embryos: Simultaneous Detection of Donor and Acceptor Signals
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Low Melting Point Agarose | Sigma-Aldrich | A9414 | |
DMSO | Sigma-Aldrich | W387520 | |
Riluzole | Sigma-Aldrich | R116 | |
Pfu Ultra HQ DNA polymerase | Agilent Technologies – Stratagene Products Division | 600389 | |
T3 Universal primer | Sigma-Aldrich | ||
Wizard SV Gel and PCR Clean-Up system | Promega | A9280 | |
Universal SmaI primer | Eurofins | ||
StrataClone Mammalian Expression Vector System / pCMV-SC blunt vector | Agilent Technologies – Stratagene Products Division | 240228 | |
SmaI | New England Biolabs | R0141S | |
T4 DNA ligase | Promega | M1801 | |
SalI | New England Biolabs | R0138S | |
EcoRV | New England Biolabs | R0195S | |
35 mm, glass-bottomed imaging dish | Ibidi | 81151 | |
forceps | Sigma-Aldrich | F6521 | |
Stereomicroscope | Leica Microsystems | M10 F | |
Digital camera | Leica Microsystems | DFC 310 FX | |
Leica Application Suite 4.7.1 software | Leica Microsystems | ||
QuickTime Player, v10.4 | Apple | ||
Confocal microscope (inverted) | Leica Microsystems | TCS SP5 | |
Microinjector | Eppendorf | Femtojet | |
ImageJ macro Biosensor_FRET | |||
GraphPad Prism 6.0c | GraphPad Software, Inc |